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Journal Article

Citation

Nakamura K, Batterham PJ, Reynolds J. J. Affect. Disord. Rep. 2022; 10: e100425.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jadr.2022.100425

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Despite high suicide rates in Japan, many people do not seek professional help for suicidal thoughts. We identified modifiable factors associated with help-seeking beliefs, attitudes, and intentions for suicidal ideation, and examined characteristics associated with suicidal ideation. Participants were 217 Japanese adults recruited online. We assessed beliefs, attitudes and intentions regarding professional help seeking, and recent suicidal ideation. Greater suicide exposure and less social support were associated with more negative help-seeking beliefs. More positive help-seeking attitudes were associated with less education, no religious affiliation, greater suicide literacy, lower suicide stigma, and lower self-reliance. No significant correlates of help-seeking intentions were identified. Recent suicidal ideation was associated with non-binary gender, less education, negative beliefs/attitudes towards help-seeking, poorer mental health, lower mastery, less social support, greater self-reliance, and greater suicide normalisation. Interventions to improve help-seeking in Japan emphasise the limits of self-reliance, and increase knowledge around suicide prevention and professional psychological services.


Language: en

Keywords

Japan; Professional help-seeking; Suicide prevention; Theory of planned behaviour

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