Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.

One way of furthering our understanding of suicidal behaviour is to examine people's attitudes towards it and how they conceive the act. The aim of this study was to understand how lay persons conceive the impact of suicide on others and how that influences their attitudes towards suicide...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Birthe Knizek, Charity Akotia, Heidi Hjelmeland, Joseph Osafo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2011-11-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/8708/13464
id doaj-9161b557f3de42bf8a7524e3ca7103f8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9161b557f3de42bf8a7524e3ca7103f82020-11-24T23:41:02ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being1748-26231748-26312011-11-016411010.3402/qhw.v6i3.8708Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.Birthe KnizekCharity AkotiaHeidi HjelmelandJoseph OsafoOne way of furthering our understanding of suicidal behaviour is to examine people's attitudes towards it and how they conceive the act. The aim of this study was to understand how lay persons conceive the impact of suicide on others and how that influences their attitudes towards suicide; and discuss the implications for suicide prevention in Ghana. This is a qualitative study, using a semi-structured interview guide to investigate the attitudes and views of 27 lay persons from urban and rural settings in Ghana. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis was used to analyse the data. Findings showed that the perceived breach of interrelatedness between people due to suicidal behaviour influenced the informants’ view of suicide as representing a social injury. Such view of suicide influenced the negative attitudes the informants expressed towards the act. The negative attitudes towards suicide in Ghana are cast in consequential terms. Thus, suicide is an immoral act because it socially affects others negatively. The sense of community within the African ethos and The Moral Causal Ontology for Suffering are theoretical postulations that are used to offer some explanations of the findings in this study.http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/8708/13464Social injuryattitudeslay personssuicideGhana
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Birthe Knizek
Charity Akotia
Heidi Hjelmeland
Joseph Osafo
spellingShingle Birthe Knizek
Charity Akotia
Heidi Hjelmeland
Joseph Osafo
Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.
International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
Social injury
attitudes
lay persons
suicide
Ghana
author_facet Birthe Knizek
Charity Akotia
Heidi Hjelmeland
Joseph Osafo
author_sort Birthe Knizek
title Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.
title_short Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.
title_full Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.
title_fullStr Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.
title_full_unstemmed Social injury: An interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in Ghana.
title_sort social injury: an interpretative phenomenological analysis of the attitudes towards suicide of lay persons in ghana.
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health & Well-Being
issn 1748-2623
1748-2631
publishDate 2011-11-01
description One way of furthering our understanding of suicidal behaviour is to examine people's attitudes towards it and how they conceive the act. The aim of this study was to understand how lay persons conceive the impact of suicide on others and how that influences their attitudes towards suicide; and discuss the implications for suicide prevention in Ghana. This is a qualitative study, using a semi-structured interview guide to investigate the attitudes and views of 27 lay persons from urban and rural settings in Ghana. Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis was used to analyse the data. Findings showed that the perceived breach of interrelatedness between people due to suicidal behaviour influenced the informants’ view of suicide as representing a social injury. Such view of suicide influenced the negative attitudes the informants expressed towards the act. The negative attitudes towards suicide in Ghana are cast in consequential terms. Thus, suicide is an immoral act because it socially affects others negatively. The sense of community within the African ethos and The Moral Causal Ontology for Suffering are theoretical postulations that are used to offer some explanations of the findings in this study.
topic Social injury
attitudes
lay persons
suicide
Ghana
url http://www.ijqhw.net/index.php/qhw/article/view/8708/13464
work_keys_str_mv AT birtheknizek socialinjuryaninterpretativephenomenologicalanalysisoftheattitudestowardssuicideoflaypersonsinghana
AT charityakotia socialinjuryaninterpretativephenomenologicalanalysisoftheattitudestowardssuicideoflaypersonsinghana
AT heidihjelmeland socialinjuryaninterpretativephenomenologicalanalysisoftheattitudestowardssuicideoflaypersonsinghana
AT josephosafo socialinjuryaninterpretativephenomenologicalanalysisoftheattitudestowardssuicideoflaypersonsinghana
_version_ 1725508156142911488