Global cross-cultural validation of a brief measure for identifying potential suicide risk in 42 countries
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UNIL restricted access
State: Public
Version: Final published version
License: Not specified
Serval ID
serval:BIB_C37E25B50B87
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Global cross-cultural validation of a brief measure for identifying potential suicide risk in 42 countries
Journal
Public Health
ISSN
0033-3506
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2024
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
229
Pages
13-23
Language
english
Abstract
Objectives
This study aimed to examine the psychometric properties of the P4 suicide screener in a multinational sample. The primary goal was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the scale and investigate its convergent validity by analyzing its correlation with depression, anxiety, and substance use.
Study design
The study design is a cross-sectional self-report study conducted across 42 countries.
Methods
A cross-sectional, self-report study was conducted in 42 countries, with a total of 82,243 participants included in the final data set.
Results
The study provides an overview of suicide ideation rates across 42 countries and confirms the structural validity of the P4 screener. The findings indicated that sexual and gender minority individuals exhibited higher rates of suicidal ideation. The P4 screener showed adequate reliability, convergence, and discriminant validity, and a cutoff score of 1 is recommended to identify individuals at risk of suicidal behavior.
Conclusions
The study supports the reliability and validity of the P4 suicide screener across 42 diverse countries, highlighting the importance of using a cross-cultural suicide risk assessment to standardize the identification of high-risk individuals and tailoring culturally sensitive suicide prevention strategies.
This study aimed to examine the psychometric properties of the P4 suicide screener in a multinational sample. The primary goal was to evaluate the reliability and validity of the scale and investigate its convergent validity by analyzing its correlation with depression, anxiety, and substance use.
Study design
The study design is a cross-sectional self-report study conducted across 42 countries.
Methods
A cross-sectional, self-report study was conducted in 42 countries, with a total of 82,243 participants included in the final data set.
Results
The study provides an overview of suicide ideation rates across 42 countries and confirms the structural validity of the P4 screener. The findings indicated that sexual and gender minority individuals exhibited higher rates of suicidal ideation. The P4 screener showed adequate reliability, convergence, and discriminant validity, and a cutoff score of 1 is recommended to identify individuals at risk of suicidal behavior.
Conclusions
The study supports the reliability and validity of the P4 suicide screener across 42 diverse countries, highlighting the importance of using a cross-cultural suicide risk assessment to standardize the identification of high-risk individuals and tailoring culturally sensitive suicide prevention strategies.
Keywords
Suicide, Assessment, Validation, Cross-cultural
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
21/02/2024 13:30
Last modification date
07/05/2024 6:17