Ethnocultural Aspects of Suicide in Young People: A Systematic Literature Review Part 2: Risk Factors, Precipitating Agents, and Attitudes Toward Suicide
Different scholars have expressed the same regret for the lack of research on ethnocultural differences in youth suicide behavior and the need to conduct more comparative studies, necessary to develop culturally responsive prevention and intervention strategies. The authors reviewed 82 publications on youth suicide that have considered, to different degrees, the ethnicity/culture of the population studied. Part 1 of this article explored youth suicide rates and methods (SLTB, this issue), while the present paper examines risk and precipitating factors and attitudes toward suicide in young people from a cross-cultural perspective.
Author(s): Erminia Colucci, BPsySc (Hon)1, | Graham Martin, MD FRANZCP2
Author(s) affiliations
1 PhD Candidate in the Department of Psychiatry at The University of Queensland, Australia, and a Research Fellow with the Centre for International Mental Health, The University of Melbourne, Australia
2 Professor and Director of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at The University of Queensland
Address correspondence to Erminia Colucci, CIMH (Centre for International Mental Health), School of Population Health, The University of Melbourne, Level 5, 207 Bouverie St, 3053 Carlton Melbourne VIC Australia; E-mail: ecolucci@unimelb.edu.au or fera_76@hotmail.com