KMID : 1025820150230030553
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Family and Family Therapy 2015 Volume.23 No. 3 p.553 ~ p.557
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Family-of-Origin Health, Self-differentiation, and Suicidal Ideation of College Students
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Shin Sae-Bom
Chung Hye-Jeong Hwang Mi-Jin
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Abstract
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Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine the influence on suicidal ideation of family-of-origin health and self-differentiation, with college adjustment acting as a mediating variable.
Methods: The researchers gave a structured questionnaire to 341 college students from five different universities in Jeolladuk-do province.
Results: First, similar levels of suicidal ideation were found across differences in gender, grades, health status, and agony. Second, family-of-origin health was positively correlated with emotional divorce in the sub factor of self-differentiation and college adjustment, and it was negatively correlated with suicidal ideation. Self-differentiation was positively correlated with college adjustment, and suicidal ideation was negatively correlated with self-differentiation and college adjustment. Third, emotional divorce in the sub factor of self-differentiation had a great effect on suicidal ideation because of the influence of variables related to suicidal ideation. Fourth, college adjustment had a mediating effect on the relationship between family-of-origin health and self-differentiation on the one hand, and suicidal ideation on the other.
Conclusions: It is important to reduce university students' suicidal ideation with a prevention plan and program.
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KEYWORD
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suicidal ideation, family-of-origin health, self-differentiation, college adjustment
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