Adolescent Decision-Making: The Value of Perceived Behavioral Control in Predicting Engagement in Suicide Prevention Behaviors.

Christine M Wienke Totura, Christa D Labouliere, Kim Gryglewicz, Marc S Karver
Author Information
  1. Christine M Wienke Totura: Department of Psychology, Auburn University, 226 Thach Hall, Auburn, AL, 36849, USA. christine.totura@auburn.edu. ORCID
  2. Christa D Labouliere: New York State Psychiatric Institute, Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York, NY, USA.
  3. Kim Gryglewicz: School of Social Work, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA.
  4. Marc S Karver: Department of Psychology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA.

Abstract

Adolescent perceived behavioral control (self-efficacy) plays a key role in influencing decision-making processes within the context of suicide prevention programming. Guided by Theory of Planned Behavior, models tested attitudinal and social factors predicting adolescent intentions and actual engagement in suicide prevention behaviors. Participants included 233 racially and ethnically diverse high school students (54% female) in a southwestern U.S. school district. Measures included attitudes, norms, perceived behavioral control, intentions, and behavior over follow-up. Structural equation modeling indicated that perceived behavioral control, rather than intentions, was the direct predictor of behaviors. For adolescents, beliefs about effectively utilizing learned suicide prevention behavior may be more important than intentions. The design of suicide prevention efforts should account for this important influence on adolescent decision-making.

Keywords

References

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Grants

  1. L30 MH114339/NIMH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
Decision Making
Female
Health Promotion
Humans
Male
Schools
Self Efficacy
Southwestern United States
Students
Suicide
Suicide Prevention

Word Cloud

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