Abstract

This paper reports the results of a comparative investigation of attitudes to suicide and suicidal persons in 5,572 university students from 12 countries. Participants filled out two scales measuring attitudes towards suicide and suicidal persons, a measure of psychological distress together with the questions about suicidal behavior. Results showed that the highest suicide acceptance scores were observed in Austrian, UK, Japanese and Saudi Arabian samples and the lowest scores were noted in Tunisian, Turkish, Iranian and Palestinian samples. While the highest social acceptance scores for a suicidal friend were noted in Turkish, US, Italian and Tunisian samples, the lowest scores were seen in Japanese, Saudi Arabian, Palestinian and Jordanian samples. Compared to participants with a suicidal past, those who were never suicidal displayed more internal barriers against suicidal behavior. Men were more accepting of suicide than women but women were more willing to help an imagined suicidal peer. Participants with accepting attitudes towards suicide but rejecting attitudes towards suicidal persons reported more suicidal behavior and psychological distress, and were more often from high suicide rate countries and samples than their counterparts. They are considered to be caught in a fatal trap in which most predominant feelings of suicidality such as hopelessness or helplessness are likely to occur. We conclude that in some societies such as Japan and Saudi Arabia it might be difficult for suicidal individuals to activate and make use of social support systems.

Highlights

  • This paper reports the results of a comparative investigation of attitudes to suicide and suicidal persons in 5572 university students from 12 countries

  • Suicidologists usually assume that favorable attitudes towards suicide are responsible for the etiology of intercultural or intersocietal variation of suicidal behavior

  • Univariate F tests showed that students with a history of suicidal behavior scored higher than those who were never suicidal on the factors of acceptability of suicide, and open reporting and discussion of suicide but those who were never suicidal scored higher than the suicidal ones on punishment after death, suicide as a sign of mental illness, and communicating psychological problems factors

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Summary

Introduction

This paper reports the results of a comparative investigation of attitudes to suicide and suicidal persons in 5572 university students from 12 countries. Participants with accepting attitudes towards suicide but rejecting attitudes towards suicidal persons reported more suicidal behavior and psychological distress, and were more often from high suicide rate countries and samples than their counterparts. Favorable attitudes to suicide solely are unable to account for some of the observed rates of suicidal behavior (Eskin, 1995a; 1999a; Eskin, Voracek, Stieger, & Altinyazar, 2011; Eskin, Palova, & Krokavcova, 2014) In these cross-cultural comparisons Turkish adolescents and young adults reported having thoughts of killing themselves as often as their Swedish, Austrian and Slovak counterparts but they reported having attempted to kill themselves significantly more often than their counterparts, despite their disapproving attitudes towards suicide. Eskin, Schild, Öncü, Stieger, & Voracek, (2015b) showed that frequencies of suicidal disclosures were the same in Austrian and Turkish groups, Turkish students disclosed their suicidality to more people than the Austrian, and suicidal disclosures in Turkey were met with helping social reactions more frequently than suicidal disclosures in Austria

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