Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures

Abstract Background A number of Delphi expert consensus studies have been carried out with different countries and cultural groups to develop guidelines on how a member of the public should provide assistance to a person who is suicidal. The present study aimed to determine whether cross-culturally...

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Main Authors: Anthony F. Jorm, Anna M. Ross, Erminia Colucci
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-03-01
Series:BMC Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-018-1636-8
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spelling doaj-68ac341bca2c47a78e8d17aef07455d52020-11-24T23:26:33ZengBMCBMC Psychiatry1471-244X2018-03-011811810.1186/s12888-018-1636-8Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and culturesAnthony F. Jorm0Anna M. Ross1Erminia Colucci2Centre for Mental Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of MelbourneCentre for Mental Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of MelbourneCentre for Mental Health, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of MelbourneAbstract Background A number of Delphi expert consensus studies have been carried out with different countries and cultural groups to develop guidelines on how a member of the public should provide assistance to a person who is suicidal. The present study aimed to determine whether cross-culturally generalizable suicide first aid actions are possible by comparing agreement across these Delphi studies. Methods Data on endorsement rates for items were compared across six Delphi studies. These studies involved panels of professionals and consumer advocates from English-speaking countries, professionals from Sri Lanka, professionals from Japan, professionals from India, professionals from the Philippines, and professionals and consumer advocates in refugee and immigrant mental health. Correlations were calculated between item endorsement rates across panels. Results There were 18 items that were highly endorsed across all eight of the Delphi panels and an additional 15 items highly endorsed across the panels from the three lower middle-income countries (India, Philippines and Sri Lanka). Correlations across panels in item endorsement rates were all 0.60 or above, but were higher between panels from countries that are socioeconomically similar. Conclusions There is broad agreement across the diverse expert panels about what are appropriate suicide first aid actions for members of the public, indicating that cross-cultural generalizability is possible. However, there is also some cultural specificity, indicating the need for local tailoring.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-018-1636-8SuicideMental health first aidDelphi studiesGuidelinesGatekeepers
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anthony F. Jorm
Anna M. Ross
Erminia Colucci
spellingShingle Anthony F. Jorm
Anna M. Ross
Erminia Colucci
Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
BMC Psychiatry
Suicide
Mental health first aid
Delphi studies
Guidelines
Gatekeepers
author_facet Anthony F. Jorm
Anna M. Ross
Erminia Colucci
author_sort Anthony F. Jorm
title Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
title_short Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
title_full Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
title_fullStr Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
title_full_unstemmed Cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
title_sort cross-cultural generalizability of suicide first aid actions: an analysis of agreement across expert consensus studies from a range of countries and cultures
publisher BMC
series BMC Psychiatry
issn 1471-244X
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Background A number of Delphi expert consensus studies have been carried out with different countries and cultural groups to develop guidelines on how a member of the public should provide assistance to a person who is suicidal. The present study aimed to determine whether cross-culturally generalizable suicide first aid actions are possible by comparing agreement across these Delphi studies. Methods Data on endorsement rates for items were compared across six Delphi studies. These studies involved panels of professionals and consumer advocates from English-speaking countries, professionals from Sri Lanka, professionals from Japan, professionals from India, professionals from the Philippines, and professionals and consumer advocates in refugee and immigrant mental health. Correlations were calculated between item endorsement rates across panels. Results There were 18 items that were highly endorsed across all eight of the Delphi panels and an additional 15 items highly endorsed across the panels from the three lower middle-income countries (India, Philippines and Sri Lanka). Correlations across panels in item endorsement rates were all 0.60 or above, but were higher between panels from countries that are socioeconomically similar. Conclusions There is broad agreement across the diverse expert panels about what are appropriate suicide first aid actions for members of the public, indicating that cross-cultural generalizability is possible. However, there is also some cultural specificity, indicating the need for local tailoring.
topic Suicide
Mental health first aid
Delphi studies
Guidelines
Gatekeepers
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12888-018-1636-8
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AT erminiacolucci crossculturalgeneralizabilityofsuicidefirstaidactionsananalysisofagreementacrossexpertconsensusstudiesfromarangeofcountriesandcultures
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