1. How Parental Reactions Change in Response to Adolescent Suicide Attempt.
- Author
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Greene-Palmer, Farrah N., Wagner, Barry M., Neely, Laura L., Cox, Daniel W., Kochanski, Kristen M., Perera, Kanchana U., and Ghahramanlou-Holloway, Marjan
- Subjects
SUICIDAL behavior ,PARENTING ,SUICIDE prevention ,SELF-destructive behavior ,SUICIDE ,CLINICAL psychology ,DEMOGRAPHY ,EMOTIONS ,FAMILY health ,GUILT (Psychology) ,PARENT-child relationships ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,PROBABILITY theory ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
This study examined parental reactions to adolescents’ suicide attempts and the association of reactions with future suicidal self-directed violence. Participants were 81 mothers and 49 fathers of 85 psychiatric inpatient adolescents. Maternal hostility and paternal anger and arguing predicted future suicide attempts. From pre- to post-attempt, mothers reported feeling increased sadness, caring, anxiety, guilt, fear, and being overwhelmed; fathers reported increased sadness, anxiety, and fear. Findings have clinical implications; improving parent-child relationships post-suicide attempt may serve as a protective factor for suicide. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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