ISSN 1671-3710
CN 11-4766/R
主办:中国科学院心理研究所
出版:科学出版社

心理科学进展 ›› 2023, Vol. 31 ›› Issue (11): 2155-2170.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1042.2023.02155

• 研究前沿 • 上一篇    下一篇

中国人群自杀风险的性别比:相关的理论、风险因素、应对策略及社会期望下的压力应对

王钟涵, 王晓田()   

  1. 香港中文大学(深圳)人文社科学院, 广东 深圳 518172
  • 收稿日期:2022-11-14 出版日期:2023-11-15 发布日期:2023-08-28
  • 通讯作者: 王晓田, E-mail: xtwang@cuhk.edu.cn
  • 基金资助:
    国家自然科学基金项目(31971025);深圳市自然科学基金项目(CYJ20220530143803009)

The sex ratio of suicide risk in China: Relevant theories, risk factors, coping strategies and social expectancy for stress coping

WANG Zhonghan, WANG X.T. (XiaoTian)()   

  1. School of Humanities and Social Science, The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Shenzhen), Shenzhen 518172, China
  • Received:2022-11-14 Online:2023-11-15 Published:2023-08-28

摘要:

在全球范围内, 自杀普遍是造成死亡的前20个主要原因之一。自杀风险, 即个体发生自杀行为的概率, 一直是海内外学者关注的课题。多年来, 世界上各国的自杀率有着一个普遍存在又具有文化差异且对现有理论具有挑战性的现象:大多数国家的数据显示男性自杀率普遍高于女性; 然而, 这一自杀的性别比例的中国数据与此有明显不同, 有时甚至出现反转。这一独特现象为自杀风险形成机制的研究提供了思路。通过梳理自杀行为的心理学理论和风险因素, 以及这一性别比现象背后存在的心理机制和相关的风险因素, 可以进一步探讨中国人群在生活史、应对心理压力的策略上的性别差异和对男女在压力应对上的不同社会期望的差异, 以上研究有助于识别具有性别特异性的有效的和不良的压力应对策略, 并对中国人群自杀风险的预防和干预有所贡献。

关键词: 自杀风险, 自杀理论, 自杀率的性别比, 生命史, 心理压力应对策略, 社会期望

Abstract:

Globally, suicide is universally among the top twenty leading causes of death. Suicide risk, referring to the probability of occurrence of suicide attempts, has been widely studied, yet still lacks a reliable explanation as to the mechanisms of the suicide risk and its effective intervention. In the present article, we focus on a phenomenon that is both prevalent, culturally distinct, and challenging to the existing theories of suicide: In most countries in the world, males have a higher suicide rate than females; however, the sex ratio of the suicide of the Chinese population is markedly different and sometimes even reversed, meaning the male/female suicide ratio is less than one. Extant popular theories of suicide, such as the diathesis-stress model (Zubin & Spring, 1977), social integration and regulation theory (Durkheim, 2005), and interpersonal theory of suicide (Joiner, 2005; van Orden et al., 2010) do not provide ready explanations of this phenomenon. The present discussion aims to sort out the psychological theories and risk factors related to suicidal behavior, focusing on identifying risk factors and possible mechanisms that may contribute to sex differences in suicide.

Most previous explanations of the sex ratio of suicide held the following two viewpoints: (1) Males were more aggressive, more success-orientated, and more risk-taking with a higher rate of injury-producing behaviors than females, resulting in more males choosing lethal suicide methods, resulting in a higher suicide rate than females; (2) Cultural and social norms allow females to engage more in help-seeking behaviors but discourage males from showing their soft sides. In addition, suicide is reviewed more as a masculine behavior. Considering the challenging Chinese sex ratio of suicide rates, a recent theory of suicide has proposed four psychological strains as causes of suicide: conflicting values, conflicts between desires and realities, relative deprivation, and poor coping skills in the face of a life crisis.

In an attempt to search for psychological mechanisms of suicide in general and of the sex ratio in suicide risk in particular, we identified, from previous theories and research findings, two possible pathways leading to sex-specific suicide risks: (1) the number and quality of coping methods males and females use differentially to deal with psychological stress, and (2) cultural-specific social expectations for stress coping. The number of methods and socially available means for coping psychological stress may vary for males and females. For instance, men in China may have more effective social means to copy with psychological stress than women. In addition, social expectations regarding ability to cope with and tolerance to stressful events may also differ depending on the sex of the respondent. If men expect women to be more resilient to stressful events in life more than women actually do, such sex-specific expectancy may aggravate the stressful experience of women, reducing their chance of being helped and increasing their risk of suicide. From the perspective of domain-specific risk-taking, suicide risk is a unique domain of risk that is sensitive to life-history factors such as age, sex, birth order, and childhood family experience. Based on the predictions derived from life-history theory, we suggested several directions for future research to understand the sex ratio of suicide risk and to identify sex-specific and effective intervention strategies.

Key words: suicide risk, theories of suicide, the sex ratio of the suicide rate, life history, coping strategies of psychological stress, social expectancy

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