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Cultural Differences in Shame and Guilt as Understandable Reasons for Suicide.

Authors
  • Crowder, Marisa K1
  • Kemmelmeier, Markus1
  • 1 6851 University of Nevada , Reno, NV, USA.
Type
Published Article
Journal
Psychological Reports
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Publication Date
Jan 01, 2017
Identifiers
DOI: 10.1177/0033294117728288
PMID: 28871882
Source
Medline
Keywords
License
Unknown

Abstract

According to the World Health Organization, a major barrier to suicide prevention work is the social stigma surrounding suicide. Since clinical research has long shown that shame and guilt are often involved in suicide and suicide ideation, the present two studies explore the extent to which individuals associate shame and guilt with suicide ideation and behavior according to their cultural background. Using a scenario approach, 1,147 Americans in two separate studies read about a traumatic situation in which the target person experienced intense shame or intense guilt. A mini meta-analysis of these studies showed that all participants were more likely to link the experience of shame to suicidality than guilt. Additionally, participants from U.S. dignity states were more likely to report suicide ideation when the target experienced guilt as opposed to shame. Our findings support the notion that the centrality of the emotions of shame and guilt varies relative to the social context, which has implications on how others perceive suicide.

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