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Emotion Regulation as a Risk Factor for Suicide Ideation among Adolescents and Young Adults: The Mediating Role of Belongingness

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 14:04 authored by Genevieve Swee, Ian Shochet, Wendell CockshawWendell Cockshaw, Leanne Hides
Thwarted belongingness is an established predictor of suicide ideation. Emerging theory suggests belongingness may be a crucial pathway through which risk factors such as dysfunctional emotion regulation influence suicide ideation. This study examined whether belongingness mediated the relationship between emotion regulation and suicide ideation in young people (16–25 years). Participants (n = 1699; 63.6% females, M = 20.24 years, SD = 2.45 years) completed measures of these constructs, including the emotion regulation domains of internal-functional, internal-dysfunctional, external-functional, and external-dysfunctional. Belongingness mediated over half of the association between three emotion regulation domains and suicide ideation (internal-functional: 55.6%, internal-dysfunctional: 54.1%, and external-functional: 64.8%). Consistent with current etiological suicidality models, results suggest low belongingness is an important precursor to suicide ideation in young people, and that there is an inter-relationship between emotional regulation styles and belongingness.

History

Journal

Journal of Youth and Adolescence

Volume

49

Issue

11

Start page

2265

End page

2274

Total pages

10

Publisher

Springer

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.

Former Identifier

2006103213

Esploro creation date

2020-11-24

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