Aufsatz(elektronisch)6. September 2018

Understanding Changes in Attitudes Toward Suicide Between 1980s and 2010s in the United States*

In: Social science quarterly, Band 99, Heft 5, S. 1585-1598

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Abstract

ObjectivesThis study examines individual characteristics associated with suicide acceptability in the United States and how (1) effects of these characteristics on attitudes have changed over time and (2) the degree to which shifts in attitudes are explained by changes in population characteristics.MethodsWe use General Social Survey (GSS) data from the 1980s (n = 4,840) and 2010s (n = 5,607) and conduct an Oaxaca decomposition.ResultsAlthough Americans remain largely unaccepting of suicide, except in the case of incurable disease, a greater percentage found suicide to be acceptable in 2010s than in 1980s. Individuals who are male, white, more educated, less religious, and more politically liberal find suicide more acceptable. Changes over time in population composition (e.g., rising education levels and declines in religion) account for about 50 percent of the rise in suicide acceptability between 1980s and 2010s.ConclusionsResults hint at shifting societal patterns, but the causal direction between attitudes and behavior cannot be determined.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

Wiley

ISSN: 1540-6237

DOI

10.1111/ssqu.12522

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