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Journal Article

Citation

Rainbow C, Baldwin P, Hosking W, Gill P, Blashki G, Shand F. Arch. Suicide Res. 2021; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, International Academy of Suicide Research, Publisher Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13811118.2021.2020191

PMID

34935605

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Psychological distress, an umbrella term encompassing emotional anguish and cognitive-behavioral symptoms of anxiety and depression, is closely linked to suicidal ideation. However, the mechanism of this relationship is unclear, dampening the utility of distress screening in suicide prevention.

PURPOSE: This study aimed to identify potential mediators of this relationship, and whether effects are sex-specific.

METHOD AND PARTICIPANTS: A sample of online help-seekers who had just completed the K10 psychological distress checklist on the Beyond Blue website [Nā€‰=ā€‰1,528] consented to complete measures of help-seeking intentions, financial wellbeing, alcohol use, social connection (belongingness), sense of being a burden on others (burdensomeness); and suicidal ideation. Moderated mediation analysis examined the indirect effects of psychological distress on suicidal ideation through these risk factors, and whether effects were moderated by sex.

RESULTS: The model accounted for 44% of the variance in suicidal ideation. The majority of participants had experienced very high psychological distress (77.3%) and at least some suicidal ideation (74.7%) in the past four weeks. A significant indirect effect of burdensomeness was found for both men and women. No other risk factors produced significant indirect effects.

CONCLUSIONS: Perceived burdensomeness appears to be central in determining how psychological distress might progress to suicidal thinking. The experience of distress may lead a person to believe that loved ones would be better off without them, prompting suicidal thinking.HighlightsPsychological distress screening is an early intervention opportunity for suicide.Intervention plans could be improved by including perceived burdensome measures.Online screening for distress is a potential bridge to offline-help seeking.


Language: en

Keywords

psychological distress; suicidal ideation; suicide prevention; Burdensomeness; online mental health screening

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