Authors
Robert J Cramer, Erika Montanaro, Marcus VanSickle, Sam Cacace, Sasha Zabelski, Emily L Smith, Michael Franks, Shawna Grover, Craig A Cunningham
Publication date
2022/11/1
Journal
Psychiatry research
Volume
317
Pages
114849
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Suicide rates remain high among military populations. Stigmatizing beliefs about suicide contribute to the problem of heightened suicide risk as a deterrent for help-seeking. Measurement of military suicide stigma is therefore an important gap in the literature as a necessity toward the development of military suicide prevention programming. This paper assessed the factor structure, reliability, and validity of the Military Suicide Attitudes Questionnaire (MSAQ). Study 1 featured secondary analysis of a suicide risk dataset from active duty treatment-seeking military personnel (N = 200). Study 2 was a secondary analysis of a statewide assessment of Army National Guard service members’ beliefs about mental health and suicide (N =1116). Factor analyses results collectively supported a four-factor Military Suicide Attitudes Questionnaire (MSAQ) structure: discomfort, unacceptability, support, and empathic views …
Total citations
2023202411
Scholar articles
RJ Cramer, E Montanaro, M VanSickle, S Cacace… - Psychiatry research, 2022