Marital Status Integration, Suicide Disapproval, and Societal Integration as Explanations of Marital Status Differences in Female Age-Specific Suicide Rates

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Marital Status Integration, Suicide Disapproval, and Societal Integration as Explanations of Marital Status Differences in Female Age-Specific Suicide Rates
Language: English
Authors: Cutright, Phillips, Stack, Steven, Fernquist, Robert
Source: Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. Dec 2007 37(6):715-724.
Availability: Guilford Press. 72 Spring Street, New York, NY 10012. Tel: 800-365-7006; Tel: 212-431-9800; Fax: 212-966-6708; e-mail: info@guilford.com; Web site: http://www.guilford.com
Peer Reviewed: Y
Physical Description: PDF
Page Count: 10
Publication Date: 2007
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Descriptors: Marital Status, Social Integration, Females, Suicide, Developed Nations, Age Differences, Social Influences, Social Attitudes, At Risk Persons, Foreign Countries, Cross Cultural Studies, Social Theories
DOI: 10.1521/suli.2007.37.6.715
ISSN: 0363-0234
Abstract: Sociological analyses of suicide have often neglected female suicide rates. Three competing explanations are tested to determine why the suicide rates of married women are, typically, lower than the suicide rates of women who are not married: (1) marital status integration, (2) societal integration, and (3) a nation's normative order about disapproval of suicide. Data refer to age and marital status-specific female suicide rates from 12 developed countries. The results provide the strongest support for the marital status integration theory and consistent support for the social integration perspective. There is also mixed support for the cultural disapproval of suicide hypothesis.
Abstractor: Author
Entry Date: 2008
Accession Number: EJ785904
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:Sociological analyses of suicide have often neglected female suicide rates. Three competing explanations are tested to determine why the suicide rates of married women are, typically, lower than the suicide rates of women who are not married: (1) marital status integration, (2) societal integration, and (3) a nation's normative order about disapproval of suicide. Data refer to age and marital status-specific female suicide rates from 12 developed countries. The results provide the strongest support for the marital status integration theory and consistent support for the social integration perspective. There is also mixed support for the cultural disapproval of suicide hypothesis.
ISSN:0363-0234
DOI:10.1521/suli.2007.37.6.715