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Health-Care Workers’ Perception of Patients’ Suicide Intention and Factors Leading to It: A Qualitative Study

Authors :
Suzaily Wahab
Uma Visvalingam
Seen Heng Yeoh
Ching Sin Siau
Norhayati Ibrahim
Lei Hum Wee
Source :
OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying. 82:323-345
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2018.

Abstract

This study explored health-care workers’ perception of patients’ suicide intention and their understanding of factors leading to particular interpretations. Semistructured face-to-face in-depth interviews were conducted with 32 health-care workers from a general hospital in Klang Valley, Malaysia. Interview data were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using the interpretative phenomenological analysis. The health-care workers were found to have four types of perceptions: to end life, not to end life, ambivalence about intention, and an evolving understanding of intention. Factors leading to their perceptions of patients’ suicide intention were patient demographics, health status, severity of ideation/attempt, suicide method, history of treatment, moral character, communication of suicide intention, affective/cognitive status, availability of social support, and health-care workers’ limited knowledge of patients’ condition/situation. Insufficient knowledge and negative attitudes toward suicidal patients led to risk minimization and empathic failure, although most health-care workers used the correct parameters in determining suicide intention.

Details

ISSN :
15413764 and 00302228
Volume :
82
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
OMEGA - Journal of Death and Dying
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....476cc6f1e1946722d427bd254d209e8d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0030222818814331