A Community-Engaged Approach to Understanding Suicide in a Small Rural County in Georgia: A Two-Phase Content Analysis of Individual and Focus Group Interviews

Suicide is a significant public health problem, with disproportionate rates in rural areas. Rural communities face substantial structural and cultural barriers to suicide prevention. This study aimed to gain a deeper understanding of the need for suicide prevention and gauge the appropriateness of p...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2023-12, Vol.20 (24), p.7145
Hauptverfasser: Roth, Kimberly Beth, Gaveras, Eleni, Ghiathi, Fatima, Shaw, Eric Kendall, Shoemaker, Melanie Shanlin, Howard, Nicholas Adam, Dhir, Meena, Caiza, Genesis Rebeca, Szlyk, Hannah Selene
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container_issue 24
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container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Roth, Kimberly Beth
Gaveras, Eleni
Ghiathi, Fatima
Shaw, Eric Kendall
Shoemaker, Melanie Shanlin
Howard, Nicholas Adam
Dhir, Meena
Caiza, Genesis Rebeca
Szlyk, Hannah Selene
description Suicide is a significant public health problem, with disproportionate rates in rural areas. Rural communities face substantial structural and cultural barriers to suicide prevention. This study aimed to gain a deeper understanding of the need for suicide prevention and gauge the appropriateness of prevention efforts in the context of a rural Georgia county by leveraging existing community resources and knowledge. Twenty one-on-one, semi-structured interviews and two focus groups were conducted, with participants recruited via purposive snowball sampling. Data analysis included qualitative deductive and inductive content analysis from individual interviews and focus groups with community stakeholders. The findings highlight how rural contexts exacerbate drivers of death by suicide and how the substantial loss of community members to suicide contributes to the ongoing crisis and reduces available support. Access to mental health care often depended on a connection to an established public system such as schools, a military base, or Veterans Administration. There were perceived gaps in crisis and post-crisis services, with participants actively trying to address these gaps and build community support through coalition building. This study contributes knowledge to contextual drivers of suicide in rural areas beyond individual-level risk factors. Community-engaged suicide prevention research in rural areas is promising, but there is a need to develop interventions to best support coalition building and capacity development.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph20247145
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subjects Community
Community Participation
Data collection
Firearms
Focus Groups
Georgia - epidemiology
Humans
Intervention
Mental health
Mortality
Prevention
Qualitative Research
Rural areas
Rural Population
Stakeholder Participation
Suicidal behavior
Suicide - psychology
Suicide prevention
Suicides & suicide attempts
Urban areas
title A Community-Engaged Approach to Understanding Suicide in a Small Rural County in Georgia: A Two-Phase Content Analysis of Individual and Focus Group Interviews
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