1. Prevalence and correlates of suicidal ideation in a sample of urban Haiti residents.
- Author
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Joshi, Manisha, Paul, Phycien, Jean-Baptiste, Caleb, Rahill, Guitele J., Odans, Elmondo, Salinas-Miranda, Abraham, Heger, Joseph, and Rice, Christopher
- Subjects
VICTIMS ,STATISTICAL correlation ,SUICIDAL ideation ,VIOLENCE ,SEX crimes ,MEMORY bias ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,STATISTICAL sampling ,SEX distribution ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,EMOTIONAL trauma ,PSYCHOLOGICAL abuse ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,RESEARCH ,SOCIODEMOGRAPHIC factors ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ALCOHOL drinking ,HAITIANS ,ADVERSE childhood experiences - Abstract
There is a dearth of scientific knowledge regarding suicidal ideation (SI) and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) in Haiti. We conducted a community survey with a convenience sample of 673 residents from Haiti's Cité Soleil (January - June 2021) to address these gaps. Participants answered questions on SI, on ACEs from the ACE international questionnaire (ACE-IQ) section 5 abuse-related items, on adult experiences of non-partner sexual violence, on use of alcohol to manage stress and on trauma responses. Latent Class Analysis identified a five-class-model of poly-victimization ranging from Class 1 (no abuse) to Class 5 (combination of emotional, physical, and sexual abuse). SI prevalence was 65.3%. Women were nearly twice as likely as men to report SI (95% CI = 1.08–2.74). Class 1 comprised 25% of participants. Class 5 members were almost four times more likely to endorse SI than Class 1 members (95% CI = 1.52–9.10). Class 4 members were roughly four times more likely to endorse SI than Class 1 members. (95% CL = 1.83–7.81). Class 3 members were nearly twice as likely to endorse SI as Class 1 members (95% CI = 1.03–3.35). Participant survivors of NPSV were three times more likely to report SI than non-victims (95% CI = 1.61–5.67). Alcohol use to manage stress increased odds of SI by 1.59 (95% CI = 1.01–2.52). Hypervigilance increased the odds of SI by 3.21 (95% CI = 1.84–5.58). Limitations include recall bias, non-generalizability, use of self-reported data, and ACE-IQ's limitations. Early identification and prevention of SI, ACE, NPSV, alcohol use, and trauma are warranted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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