Rethinking Suicide Risk With a New Generation of Suicide Theories
- PMID: 33199410
- DOI: 10.1891/RTNP-D-19-00128
Rethinking Suicide Risk With a New Generation of Suicide Theories
Abstract
Background: Suicide is a global concern to nurses and other health-care providers. However, deaths by suicide are only part of the spectrum of suicide, as suicidal thinking and behaviors may precede a suicide attempt. Theoretical models are used infrequently in research to explain how the individual progresses from suicidal ideation to a suicide attempt. Thus, there is a critical need to advance the study of suicide with useful theoretical models to describe and explain processes whereby suicidal thoughts transition to attempts and to suicide.
Purpose: This article provides a conceptual discussion and scoping review comparing historical and contemporary ideation-to-action theories of suicide.
Method: Systematic reviews and meta-analyses from three databases (CINAHL, JSTOR, and PsychINFO) were reviewed to find literature describing suicide theories.
Results: Historically, theory applications have limited capacity to differentiate between those individuals with suicidal ideations and those who attempt suicide. Newer theories, grounded in the ideation-to-action framework, propose distinct processes explaining what moves an individual from suicidal ideations toward suicidal behaviors.
Implications for practice: The ideation-to-action theories can guide health-care providers' assessment of at-risk individuals beyond merely asking about suicidal thinking.
Conclusion: The new generation of suicide theories suggest that suicidal ideations are only one component of risk. The common factor in ideation-to-action theories that distinguishes ideators from attempters is the acquired capability for suicide.
Keywords: ideation-to-action framework; suicide attempts; suicide ideation; theories of suicide.
© Copyright 2020 Springer Publishing Company, LLC.
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