Abstract

It is widely held in socio-behavioral studies of suicide that higher levels of stress and lower levels of economic status amplify suicidal vulnerability when confronted with a proximal stressor, reflecting the traditionally prevalent understanding in health psychology and sociology that associates adverse life circumstances with undesirable mental health outcomes. However, upon reflection, there are strong theoretical reasons to doubt that having more stress or being in a more stressful environment always increases suicidal vulnerability given the occurrence of a crisis. Using large nationally representative public survey data on South Korean adolescents, I show that the association between recent psychosocial crisis and suicidal ideation often gets stronger with more favorable levels of perceived stress and improving levels of family economic status. Overall, the increase in the probability of suicidal ideation from recent exposure to a psychosocial crisis is consistently the smallest around medium levels of stress or family economic status and larger at low or high levels. A supplementary exercise suggests that the identified moderation effects operate mainly in virtue of individual-level stress or family economic status in the relative absence of contextual influences at the school level. The findings present preliminary evidence of the stress inoculation hypothesis with regard to suicidal ideation. Research on suicidal vulnerability could benefit from increased attentiveness to the mechanisms through which being in an adverse or unfavorable life situation could protect against the suicide-inducing effects of proximal stressors.

Highlights

  • Suicide research tended to study the effect of risk factors one by one, and a wide variety of risk factors have been identified and confirmed across multiple domains

  • Previous research on suicidal vulnerability largely worked under the assumption that adolescents living in adverse psychosocial circumstances are generally more vulnerable to the suicide-inducing effects of a crisis

  • Starting from the theoretical intuition that such a relationship may not always hold, using a large nationally representative sample of South Korean adolescents, I ran a series of logit regressions with a special focus on exploring non-linear interactions between a proximal stressor and self-rated stress or selfrated family economic status for predicting suicidal ideation

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Summary

Introduction

Suicide research tended to study the effect of risk factors one by one, and a wide variety of risk factors have been identified and confirmed across multiple domains. In the past couple of decades, there has been an increasing interest in interactions between risk factors of suicidal behavior [1]. The stress-diathesis model is an influential theoretical framework that guides research on interactions between risk factors of psychiatric outcomes and has been widely adopted in the study of suicide [2,3,4,5]. U-shaped relationship between stress/family economic status and vulnerability to suicidal ideation do not possess the right to directly distribute the data

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