| Literature DB >> 36226112 |
Xinlu Wang1, Zhongqiu Lu2, Chaoqun Dong1.
Abstract
Objective: Suicide resilience is gaining increasing attention from researchers because of its potential role in preventing suicide. However, it has not been clearly analyzed, and there are various meanings and terms regarding this issue. The purpose of this analysis, therefore, was to conceptualize the concept of suicide resilience.Entities:
Keywords: concept analysis; mental health; protective factors; suicide prevention; suicide resilience
Year: 2022 PMID: 36226112 PMCID: PMC9548617 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.984922
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 5.435
Adaptation of Walker and Avant steps of concept analysis.
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| 1. Select a concept | Suicide resilience was selected as the concept for this analysis |
| 2. Determine the aims of analysis | This analysis aimed to conceptualize suicide resilience |
| 3. Identify all uses of the concept | Identify possible uses of the concept of suicide resilience from various resources such as dictionaries and research databases |
| 4. Determine the defining attributes | Determine the characteristics that are most frequently associated with the concept of suicide resilience |
| 5. Identify a model case | Identify an example of suicide resilience that contains all the defining attributes |
| 6. Identify additional cases | Two additional cases (borderline and contrary cases) were identified in this analysis. A borderline case is an instance that contains most (but not all) defining attributes of suicide resilience. A contrary case is an instance that contains none of the attributes |
| 7. Identify antecedents and consequences | Identify the events that take place prior to the occurrence of suicide resilience, and those occur as an outcome of the appearance of suicide resilience |
| 8. Define empirical referents | Define the empirical referents that measure the existence and attributes of suicide resilience |
Figure 1PRISMA literature search flowchart.
Characteristics of the included literature.
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| 1. | Fenaughty et al. ( | Qualitative | Young gay men | The coming-out process | Social support, high self-esteem, active efforts to develop effective coping strategies | Swing the finely balanced seesaw away from a suicide attempt | Interview |
| 2. | Osman et al. ( | Quantitative | Adolescents and adults | Suicide risk | Internal protection, external protection, emotional stability | Reduce suicide risk | Suicide Resilience Inventory |
| 3. | Everall et al. ( | Qualitative | Previously suicidal female | Being suicidal | Social support, emotion-focused coping strategies, shifting to positive perspective, purposeful and goal-directed action | Overcome suicidality | Interview |
| 4. | Bostik ( | Dissertation (Qualitative) | Those who had experienced adolescent suicidality | Being suicidal | Supportive relationships, feeling safe, willingness to turn to others for help and support, finding hope, sense of control, personal responsibility, positive thinking, meaning in life, thinking about others | Able to cope effectively with feelings of despair, better equipped to handle future challenges successfully | Interview |
| 5. | Lakeman et al. ( | Review | Those who had experienced suicidal ideation | Being suicidal | Connection with others | Live with or get over being suicidal | N/A |
| 6. | Bergmans et al. ( | Qualitative | Young adults between the ages of 18–25 years, who have a history of two or more suicide attempts | Repeated suicide-related behavior | Becoming aware of choices, diagnostic education, becoming aware of emotions, understanding the role of emotion as part of human experience, and learning to identify and tolerate emotions | Transition from higher to lower risk of suicide, moving from “living to die” to “dying to live” | Interview |
| 7. | Johnson et al. ( | Quantitative | Participants with schizophrenia-spectrum disorders | Schizophrenia-spectrum disorders | Positive self-appraisals (particular appraisals of emotion coping ability) | Buffer the pernicious impact of hopelessness in the development of suicidal thoughts | Resilience Appraisals Scale |
| 8. | Johnson et al. ( | Quantitative | College student | Stressful life events | Positive self-appraisals | Buffer the effect that negative life events have on suicidality | Resilience Appraisals Scale |
| 9. | Johnson et al. ( | Review | N/A | Suicide risk | Positive attributional style, high levels of agency, problem-solving ability, self-esteem, problem-solving confidence, social support | Buffer individuals from the development of suicidality in the face of risk factors or stressors | N/A |
| 10. | O'Dwyer et al. ( | Qualitative | Family carers of people with dementia | Intense and demanding work of caring for a family member with dementia | Coping strategies, personal characteristics such as flexibility, determination and compassion, social support, faith | Do not experience suicidal thoughts, despite challenging care situations, or have refrained from acting on suicidal thoughts | Interview |
| 11. | Sun et al. ( | Qualitative | Patients who recovered from suicide attempts and their caregivers | Suicide attempt | Self-reflection and to live for family, strong support systems, becoming flexible and open-minded, rebuild a positive sense of self, positive coping strategies to deal with stress, self-care | Keep going to achieve a satisfying life | Interview |
| 12. | Kleiman et al. ( | Quantitative | Undergraduate students | Suicide risk | Meaning in life | Decrease suicidal ideation over time and decrease lifetime odds of a suicide attempt | N/A |
| 13. | Kleiman et al. ( | Quantitative | College students | Suicide risk | Meaning in life, gratitude, grit | Decline suicidal ideation over time | N/A |
| 14. | Benson ( | Dissertation (Quantitative) | Veterans | Combat distress | Sense of coherence (the ability to understand, manage, and find meaning in negative life experiences) | Successfully cope with their combat experiences and prevent subsequent suicidality despite how traumatic they perceive their experiences to be | Suicide Resilience Inventory |
| 15. | Chi et al. ( | Qualitative | People who had attempted suicide | Suicide attempt | Self-awareness, inter-relatedness of life, coping in a healthy manner with the stresses in life, acceptance of self, others, and of life itself, adjusting to the reality | Regain the desire to be alive and begin investing in life | Interview |
| 16. | Reading et al. ( | Qualitative | Prisoners with a past experience of suicidal thoughts, feelings, or attempts | Being suicidal | Sense of self, presence of meaning, connectedness, shift of perspective, and re-establishing control | Overcome suicidality | Interview |
| 17. | Panagioti et al. ( | Quantitative | Individuals who had previously been exposed to a traumatic event and reported PTSD symptoms in the past month | PTSD symptoms | Perceived social support | Buffer individuals with PTSD symptoms against the development of suicidal thoughts and behaviors | N/A |
| 18. | Kleiman et al. ( | Quantitative | College students | Suicide risk | Social support and positive events | Buffer the relationship between negative events and suicidal ideation | N/A |
| 19. | Matel-Anderson et al. ( | Qualitative | Nurses who had experiences working with adolescent inpatients admitted for a suicide attempt | Suicide attempt | Connection with others, future plans, faith or a belief, expression of feelings, and communicating stressful thoughts | Prevent future suicide attempts and completion | Interview |
| 20. | Heisel et al. ( | Quantitative | Community-residing older adults over 65 years old | Late-life suicide risk | Meaning in life | Protect against the onset or exacerbation of late-life suicide ideation | N/A |
| 21. | Chan et al. ( | Qualitative | Participants who have contemplated death by suicide | Being suicidal | Social support, religion and spirituality, reconnecting with self, realizing the impact on family, things to be done, goals for the future, healthy coping behaviors | Find reasons to go on living | Interview |
| 22. | Kapoor et al. ( | Quantitative | Low-income African American women who reported a suicide attempt and exposure to intimate partner violence in the prior year or currently | Childhood abuse, suicide attempt | Intrapersonal strength, self-efficacy, spiritual well-being, Internal protection, external protection, emotional stability | Protect an individual from engaging in suicidal behavior in response to major stressors, other risk factors, and suicidal thoughts | Suicide Resilience Inventory |
| 23. | Crona et al. ( | Qualitative | Inpatients diagnosed with severe depression who had attempted suicide | Being suicidal | Regaining control, relief in the personal situation, professional care | Make a decision to continue living | Interview |
| 24. | Sellin et al. ( | Qualitative | Participants who were admitted to psychiatric inpatient care related to suicide risk | Suicide risk | Reconnecting with oneself, expressing oneself, supportive relatives, professional care | Be capable of managing their own lives | Interview |
| 25. | Sun et al. ( | Quantitative | People who had attempted suicide | Suicide attempt | Self-awareness of the value of life, application of coping strategies, striving to live a normal and satisfying life, better economic conditions, less frequent suicidal behavior | Create a more stable and fulfilling life, have an improved recovery from suicide | Suicidal recovery ability Scale |
| 26. | Tofthagen et al. ( | Qualitative | People who have committed no self-harm during the past 2 years and experienced recovery from self-harm | Suicidal behavior | Stable relationship, inner pain expression, reconciling with oneself, engaging in alternative actions to self-harm, taking responsibility for themselves, receiving guidance from mental health nurse | Learn to choose life and cope with everyday life without the need for self-harm, gain a greater understanding of how one's own wellbeing can be promoted even without being completely ‘cured' of the illness | Interview |
| 27. | Collins et al. ( | Quantitative | University students | Suicide risk | Mindfulness, zest for life | Lower levels of suicidal desire | N/A |
| 28. | Siegmann et al. ( | Quantitative | University students | Depressive symptoms | Positive mental health, life satisfaction, social support | Buffer the impact of depressive symptoms on suicide ideation | N/A |
| 29. | Sun et al. ( | Quantitative | Individuals who have attempted suicide | Suicide attempt | Self-awareness of the value of life, application of coping strategies, striving to live a normal and satisfying life | Reawaken hope and regain the desire to live | Suicidal Recovery Ability Scale |
| 30. | Gallagher et al. ( | Review | High-risk youth | High suicide risk | Individual assets such as problem-solving, cognitive style, self-esteem, ecological resources such as social support, meaningful activities | Reduce suicide risk | N/A |
| 31. | Roberts ( | Dissertation (qualitative) | Adults who thought about taking their own lives as an adolescent and decided against it | Being suicidal | Connectedness, hope, and love | Lessen the intensity of emotional pain, and not act on arising suicidal thoughts | Interview |
| 32. | Shaw et al. ( | Qualitative | Alaska Native or American Indian who had a self-reported history of seeking help for suicidality | Being suicidal | Positive social connections, responsibility, access to health services, skills to mitigate stress | Lessen the severity of their suicidality, stay safe during times when they had experienced thoughts of suicide, reduce suicide risk | Interview |
| 33. | Matel-Anderson et al. ( | Quantitative | College students 18 to 24 years old | Suicide risk | Social support, positive thinking, self-esteem | Decrease the risk of suicide | Suicide Resilience Inventory |
| 34. | Gulbas et al. ( | Qualitative | Latina adolescents who attempt suicide | Suicide attempt | Reconnection to family, access to mental health services, development of cognitive strengths and coping skills | Promote and sustain wellbeing following a suicide attempt, a reduction in feelings of hopelessness and suicidal thoughts | Interview |
| 35. | Fullerton et al. ( | Quantitative | Public school students in grades 9 to 12 | Suicide risk | Positive adult relationships | Greatly reduce the odds of suicide attempt | N/A |
| 36. | Harris et al. ( | Qualitative | Individuals with non-affective psychosis or schizophrenia diagnoses who had the experience suicidal thoughts and behaviors | A diagnosis of schizophrenia and being suicidal | Understanding experiences, reasons to live, sense of security, responsibility to others, a desire for personal development, active behaviors including talking to people, keeping occupied, and feeling supported | Manage psychosis and the concomitant suicidal thoughts and behaviors | Interview |
| 37. | Zaheer et al. ( | Qualitative | Chinese-born women living in Canada with a history of suicidal behavior | Being suicidal | Support from health professionals, family, and friends, spiritual support, self-care, creating goals for the future, and a sense of mastery | Reduce suicide ideation, and improve their ability to cope with stress and pressure | Interview |
| 38. | Fuller-Thomson et al. ( | Quantitative | Canadians in chronic and disabling pain who had ever had serious suicidal thoughts | Suicide ideation relating to chronic pain | Be older, white, women, better educated, with a confidant and more likely to use spirituality or religion to cope, no history of mental health illness | Free of suicidal thoughts in the preceding year | N/A |
| 39. | Wadhwa et al. ( | Quantitative | Three studies of suicide ideation among older adults | Late-life suicide risk | Reasons for living | Protect against suicide risk in later life | The Reasons for Living-Suicide Resiliency Scale |
| 40. | Chen et al. ( | Dissertation (qualitative) | Adult suicide attempters | Suicide attempt | Willing to seek help, healthy coping behaviors, strengthening ability and confidence to face and solve problems, adjust thinking, social support, religion, health professionals, responsibility | Move away from the suicide crisis, and move toward life adaptation and recovery | Interview |
| 41. | Clement et al. ( | Quantitative | College students | Suicide risk | Optimism, hope, and grit | Reduce suicide risk | N/A |
| 42. | Harris et al. ( | Review | N/A | Schizophrenia diagnoses | Perceived social support, holding religious and spiritual beliefs, reasons for living, perceived positive personal skills and attributes | Prevent suicidal thoughts and behaviors | N/A |
| 43. | Rodríguez-Quiroga et al. ( | Quantitative | Adolescents | Suicide risk | Cognitive resilience, interpersonal relationship | Reduce suicide risk | STOP-Suicidality Resilience Factors Scale |
| 44. | Sánchez-Teruel et al. ( | Quantitative | People who have made a previous suicide attempt | Suicide attempt | Internal protection, external protection, emotional stability | Reduce the high risk of suicide reattempt | Scale of resilience to Suicide Attempts |
| 45. | Kumar et al. ( | Quantitative | Undergraduate students who reported an adolescent or adulthood sexual assault | Posttraumatic stress symptoms linked to sexual assault | Optimism, gratitude | Decrease the adverse impact of a traumatic event, weaken the association between posttraumatic stress and suicidal ideation | N/A |
| 46. | Houchins ( | Dissertation (quantitative) | Active duty U.S. Army Soldiers who reported significant suicidal ideation | Suicide ideation | Reasons for living, positive attributional style, grit, posttraumatic growth, mindfulness, purpose/meaning in life, curiosity, and dispositional optimism | Protect against suicidality | N/A |
| 47. | Bryan et al. ( | Quantitative | US military personnel | High suicide risk | Happiness, meaning in life | Reduce suicide risk | N/A |
| 48. | Fuller-Thomson et al. ( | Quantitative | Respondents who reported that they had attempted suicide at some point in their lives | Suicide attempt | Having a confidant, being female, older age, higher income, and having no history of mental illness | Free from suicidal thoughts, experience life satisfaction, and psychological wellbeing | N/A |
| 49. | Yu et al. ( | Quantitative | Adolescents with different patterns of depressive symptoms | Depressive symptoms | Life satisfaction, optimism | Buffer against suicidality risk in the face of mild or moderate to severe depressive symptoms | N/A |
| 50. | Richardson et al. ( | Qualitative | Men who had attempted suicide | Suicide attempt | Recognizing the need for help and support, talking, social connections and relationships with others | Manage a crisis, halt the progression from suicidal ideation to behavior | Interview |
| 51. | Ridge et al. ( | Qualitative | Men who self-reported past serious suicidal thinking and intent | Being suicidal | Realizing that they had control of their own fate, gaining an understanding of their distress, initiating meaningful life change, connecting with others, and refocusing on the positive | Move away from suicidal thinking and toward recovery | Interview |
| 52. | Han et al. ( | Quantitative | Young adults aged between 18 and 25 years who experienced suicidal thoughts in the past year | Being suicidal | Cognitive flexibility, self-efficacy in expressions of positive affect, reduced use of digital technology, less self-harm and substance use for coping | Less severe suicidal thoughts, greater positive affect, and less negative affect | N/A |
Involved defining attributes in six suicide resilience instruments.
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| Suicide resilience inventory | Osman et al. ( | No limit | 3 (25) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Resilience appraisal scale | Johnson et al. ( | No limit | 3 (12) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| The suicide recovery ability scale | Sun et al. ( | People who have attempted suicide | 3 (15) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Reasons for living-suicide resiliency scale | Wadhwa et al. ( | Older adults | 1 (9) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| STOP-Suicidality resilience factors scale | Rodríguez-Quiroga et al. ( | Child and adolescent | 2 (/) | ✓ | ✓ | |||
| The scale of resilience to suicide attempts | Sánchez-Teruel et al. ( | People who have attempted suicide | 3 (18) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | |
Figure 2Conceptual model of suicide resilience[[Inline Image]].