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Journal Article

Citation

Sørensen JB, Agampodi T, Sørensen BR, Siribaddana S, Konradsen F, Rheinländer T. BMJ Glob. Health 2017; 2(4): e000462.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bmjgh-2017-000462

PMID

29259823

PMCID

PMC5728297

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Harmful alcohol use has been found to cause detriment to the consumers and those around them. Research carried out in Sri Lanka has described the socioeconomic consequences to families owing to alcohol consumption. However, the social processes around alcohol use and how it could result in behaviour such as self-harm was unclear. With an outset in daily life stressors in marriages and intimate relationships we explored alcohol use in families with a recent case of self-harm.

METHODS: Qualitative data were collected for 11 months in 2014 and 2015 in the North Central and North Western provinces of Sri Lanka. Narrative life story interviews with 19 individuals who had self-harmed where alcohol was involved and 25 of their relatives were conducted. Ten focus group discussions were carried out in gender and age segregated groups. An inductive content analysis was carried out.

RESULTS: Participants experienced two types of daily life stressors: non-alcohol-related stressors, such as violence and financial difficulties, and alcohol-related stressors. The alcohol-related stressors aggravated the non-alcohol-related daily life stressors within marriages and intimate relationships, which resulted in conflict between partners and subsequent self-harm. Women were disproportionately influenced by daily life stressors and were challenged in their ability to live up to gendered norms of marriage. Further, women were left responsible for their own and their husband's inappropriate behaviour. Self-harm appeared to be a possible avenue of expressing distress. Gendered alcohol and marriage norms provided men with acceptable excuses for their behaviour, whether it was alcohol consumption, conflicts or self-harm.

CONCLUSIONS: This study found that participants experienced both alcohol-related and non-alcohol-related daily life stressors. These two categories of daily life stressors, gender inequalities and alcohol norms should be considered when planning alcohol and self-harm prevention in this setting. Life situations also reflected larger community and structural issues.


Language: en

Keywords

Sri Lanka; alcohol; daily life stress; everyday life; gender; intimate relationships; marriage; self-harm; suicide

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