“When you are alone you have a narrow mind, but when you are with others you think broader into the other aspects”. A qualitative study on the role of sense of belonging and mattering in attempted suicide in Uganda
Date
2024-11-02
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being
Abstract
Introduction: Suicide is globally a severe problem with an estimated 700.000 deaths annually.
Six of the 10 countries with the highest suicide rates worldwide are in Africa, though, reliable
statistics are scarce.
Method: In this qualitative interview study in Uganda, we analysed the stories of 16 people
admitted to hospital following a serious suicide attempt. We focussed especially on each
person’s decision process towards their resolution to attempt suicide.
Findings: Despite the huge heterogeneity of the narratives, we could identify problems
regarding the sense of belonging and mattering in all the stories. Both the sense of belonging
and mattering have been related to suicidal behaviour in earlier theories, but they were never
studied together or under consideration of the influence of this specific cultural context. We
found that the participants’ sense of belonging and mattering to a large degree was
influenced by their traditional communalistic context with a worldview where the line
between the natural and spiritual world was blurry.
Conclusion: This kind of knowledge could be a valuable source for health professionals in
their treatment of suicidal persons; it could direct their approach to the core of each person’s
relational problems and meaning-making, which is crucial for their decisions with regard to
suicide.
Description
Keywords
Suicide attempt, Belonging, Mattering, Uganda, Culture
Citation
Knizek, B. L., Mugisha, J., Kinyanda, E., Hagen, J., & Hjelmeland, H. (2024). “When you are alone you have a narrow mind, but when you are with others you think broader into the other aspects”. A qualitative study on the role of sense of belonging and mattering in attempted suicide in Uganda. International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being, 19(1), 2424012.