The Cultural Context of Suicide Stigma in Taiwan
- 1 March 2004
- journal article
- other
- Published by SAGE Publications in Qualitative Health Research
- Vol. 14 (3) , 345-358
- https://doi.org/10.1177/1049732303262057
Abstract
In the ethnographic study on which this article is based, the authors investigate experiences after a suicide attempt from the perspective of patients and their familymembers in Taiwan. Thirty-four patients and 49 family members or colleagues participated in interviews from the point of patients’ hospitalization to their return to the community. The postsuicide stigma suffered by patients and their families was based on such cultural themes as Suicide is bu-hsiao (non–filial piety), Suicide results in an inability to transmigrate the soul, and Suicide is inherited. Patients, family members, and colleagues cope with the stigma through explaining suicide as due to “bad luck” or “akan-huo (hot energy) problem,” or by insisting that it was “not a true suicide.” These findings suggest that health professionals can move closer to patients and their families and suggest appropriate health care policy through understanding the patient’s and the family’s explanation of suicide experiences.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Illness experience, meaning and help-seeking among Chinese immigrants in Canada with chronic fatigue and weaknessAnthropology & Medicine, 2001
- Culture and Psychotherapy: Review and Practical GuidelinesTranscultural Psychiatry, 1999
- Filial Piety and Loyalty: Two Types of Social Identification in ConfucianismAsian Journal of Social Psychology, 1999
- Suicide and Gender in the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Chinese in the USTranscultural Psychiatry, 1998
- Worldwide trends in suicide mortality, 1955–1989Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica, 1994
- Suicide: A conceptual model for an avoidable deathArchives of Psychiatric Nursing, 1991
- A comparison of injury death rates in China and the United States, 1986.American Journal of Public Health, 1991
- The angry liver, the anxious heart and the melancholy spleenCulture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 1990
- Styles of verbal expression of emotional and physical experiences: A study of depressed patients and normal controls in ChinaCulture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 1986
- Sociocultural Determinants of the Help-seeking Behavior of Patients with Mental IllnessJournal of Nervous & Mental Disease, 1982