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Explaining Suicide
Patterns, Motivations, and What Notes Reveal

Represents a full scale analysis of motivations for suicide as detailed from notes left behind

Cheryl L. Meyer (Author), Taronish Irani (Author), Katherine A. Hermes (Author), Betty Yung (Author)

9780128092897, Elsevier Science

Hardback, published 3 January 2017

288 pages
22.9 x 15.1 x 2.3 cm, 0.54 kg

The rate of suicides is at its highest level in nearly 30 years. Suicide notes have long been thought to be valuable resources for understanding suicide motivation, but up to now the small sample sizes available have made an in-depth analysis difficult. Explaining Suicide: Patterns, Motivations, and What Notes Reveal represents a large-scale analysis of suicide motivation across multiple ages during the same time period. This was made possible via a unique dataset of all suicide notes collected by the coroner’s office in southwestern Ohio 2000–2009.

Based on an analysis of this dataset, the book identifies top motivations for suicide, how these differ between note writers and non-note writers, and what this can tell us about better suicide prevention. The book reveals the extent to which suicide is motivated by interpersonal violence, substance abuse, physical pain, grief, feelings of failure, and mental illness. Additionally, it discusses other risk factors, what differentiates suicide attempters from suicide completers, and lastly what might serve as protective factors toward resilience.

1. The History and Theories of Suicide2. Findings3. Suicide Motivated by Interpersonal Relationships4. Escape as a Motivation for Suicide5. Grief and Failure6. The Complexity of Suicide Motivation7. Severe Mental Illness8. The Intersection of Suicide and Legal Issues9. Protective Factors and Resilience10. Conclusions and Implications

Subject Areas: Clinical psychology [MMJ], The self, ego, identity, personality [JMS], Social, group or collective psychology [JMH], Psychology [JM]

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