(A)
Non-Clinical Populations (n = 17) | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Author(s) | Study Design | Sample | Instrument Assessing MiL | SB-Related Variables | ||||
Population | Size (N) | SI | SA | Completed Suicide | Other SB-Related Variables and/or Main Commentaries | |||
Edwards and Holden, 2001 [27] | Cross-sectional | Undergraduate students | 298 | PIL, Sense of Coherence Scale | ↓ | ↓ | − | ↓ Self-reported likelihood of future SB |
Orbach et al., 2003 (study 2) [28] | Cross-sectional | Undergraduate students | 98 | LRI | − | − | − | MiL inversely related to mental pain |
Wang et al., 2007 [1] | Cross-sectional | Undergraduate students | 416 | PIL | ↓ | ↓ | − | Mediation model: MiL mediated relationships between stress, coping, SI, and SA indirectly via an inverse effect on depression |
Heisel and Flett, 2008 [29] | Cross-sectional | Elderly | 107 | GSIS Perceived MiL subscale | ↓ | − | − | − |
Bjerkeset et al., 2010 [30] | Longitudinal prospective | Individuals aged 20+ yr, based on the Norwegian HUNT general population cohort | 141,117 | Self-reported measure of sense of MiL (n.sp.) | n.sp. | n.sp. | ↓ | A lower sense of MiL associated with increased suicide risk after controlling for common mental disorders that emerged during the survey |
Kleiman et al., 2013 [31] | Longitudinal prospective | Undergraduate students | 209 | MLQ | ↓ | − | − | Mediated moderation model: gratitude and grit work synergistically to enhance MiL and confer resiliency to suicide by increasing MiL |
Henry et al., 2014 [32] | Cross-sectional | Undergraduate students | 2936 | 3-item MLQ | ↓ | − | − | Mediation model (female population): MiL could explain how bullying victimization leads to SI; moderation model (male population): effect of victimization on SI was attenuated as MiL increased |
Wilchek-Aviad, 2015 [33] | Cross-sectional | Adolescents (Ethiopian immigrant and native-born Israeli) | 277 | PIL | − | − | − | ↓ Suicidal tendencies (measured while accounting for depression and anxiety/emotional state) beyond one’s immigrant and native-born status |
Denneson et al., 2015 [22] | Qualitative | Veterans | 34 | Semi-structured interviews | ↓ | − | − | |
Heisel and Flett, 2016 [34] | Longitudinal prospective | Elderly | 126 | EMIL, PIL | ↓ | − | − | − |
Heisel et al., 2016 [35] | Longitudinal prospective | Elderly | 109 | EMIL | ↓ | − | − | Mediation model: MiL mediated associations between “Reasons for Living” and SI; it also explained the significant unique variance in SI |
Wilchek-Aviad and Malka, 2016 [36] | Cross-sectional | Adolescents (Jewish religious and secular) | 450 | PIL | − | − | − | ↓ Suicidal tendency (see above) beyond religiosity |
Wilchek-Aviad et al., 2017 [37] | Cross-sectional | Adolescents (having different types of leisure time activities) | 450 | PIL | ↓ | − | − | MiL was greatest among adolescents involved in social endeavors, lower among those involved in solitary activities, and lowest among those not involved in any leisure activity |
Wilchek-Aviad and Ne’eman-Haviv, 2018 [38] | Cross-sectional | Adolescent girls (disadvantaged at different stages of rehabilitation and normative) | 209 | PIL | − | − | − | ↓ Suicidal potential (equivalent to the suicidal tendency, see above) among normative and disadvantaged adolescent girls residing in boarding schools |
Schnell et al., 2018 [39] | Cross-sectional | Undergraduate students | 300 | Crisis of Meaning Scale | ↓ | ↓ | − | Crisis of meaning was distinguished from depression and predicted suicidality in youth independent of depression |
Liu et al., 2018 [40] | Cross-sectional | Chinese professional employees | 687 | MLM | ↓ | − | − | Mediation model: MiL mediated relationships between psychological strain and SI |
Testoni et al., 2018 [41] | Qualitative | Homeless people | 55 | Thematic and interpretative phenomenological analysis | ↓ | − | − | MiL was the most important reason for living; when it was considered unworkable, addiction/alcoholism represented a strategy to endure life in the street. Neither religiosity nor meaning of death were protective factors for addiction/alcoholism or SI |