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Social Support and Help-Seeking Among Suicide Bereaved: A Study With Italian Survivors.

Lorenza EntilliDiego De LeoFabio AiolliMirko PolatoOmbretta GaggiSabrina Cipolletta
Published in: Omega (2021)
Research over how suicide survivors approach services is limited. Aims: This cross-sectional study explores the psychological state and perceived social support of Italian survivors, including those who have not sought for help, and investigates differences for gender or kinship with the departed. Methods: Rule-based system (RBS) analyses identified relationships between social support and reported formal/informal help-seeking behavior. One-hundred thirty-two (103F; 27M) suicide survivors (53 having never sought for support) answered an anonymous online survey. Life satisfaction, wellbeing, perceived social support, suicidal ideation and formal/informal help-seeking were investigated. Results: RBS analysis identified different help-seeking behaviors: survivors lacking social support may avoid reaching a psychologist and prefer GPs, look for advice in online forums and rely on people out of their narrower network such as co-workers. Conclusion: These unique study's results offer insight to identify which specific areas would be fruitful to investigate while assessing social support in bereaved individuals.
Keyphrases
  • social support
  • depressive symptoms
  • mental health
  • young adults
  • healthcare
  • social media
  • primary care
  • health information
  • physical activity
  • mass spectrometry
  • network analysis
  • high speed