TY - JOUR
PY - 2017//
TI - The intersection of interpersonal and self-directed violence among general adult, college student and sexually diverse samples
JO - International journal of social psychiatry
A1 - Cramer, Robert J.
A1 - Desmarais, Sarah L.
A1 - Johnson, Kiersten L.
A1 - Gemberling, Tess M.
A1 - Nobles, Matt R.
A1 - Holley, Sarah R.
A1 - Wright, Susan
A1 - Van Dorn, Richard
SP - 78
EP - 85
VL - 63
IS - 1
N2 - BACKGROUND: Suicide and interpersonal violence (i.e. victimization and perpetration) represent pressing public health problems, and yet remain mostly addressed as separate topics. AIMS: To identify the (1) frequency and overlap of suicide and interpersonal violence and (2) characteristics differentiating subgroups of violence-related experiences.
METHODS: A health survey was completed by 2,175 respondents comprised of three groups: college students ( n = 702), adult members of a sexuality special interest organization ( n = 816) and a community adult sample ( n = 657). Latent class analysis was used to identify subgroups characterized by violence experiences; logistic regression was used to identify respondent characteristics differentiating subgroups.
RESULTS: Overall rates of violence perpetration were low; perpetration, victimization and self-directed violence all varied by sample. Adults with alternative sexual interests reported high rates of victimization and self-directed violence. Analyses indicated two subgroups: (1) victimization + self-directed violence and (2) self-directed violence only. The victimization + self-directed violence subgroup was characterized by older, White, female and sexual orientation minority persons. The self-directed violence subgroup was characterized by younger, non-White, male and straight counterparts engaging with more sexual partners and more frequent drug use.
CONCLUSION: Findings support the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) definition of suicide as self-directed violence. Suicide intervention and prevention should further account for the role of violent victimization by focusing on the joint conceptualization of self-directed and interpersonal violence. Additional prevention implications are discussed.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0020-7640 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0020764016683728 ID - ref1 ER -