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Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

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Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices. / Sammon, Myles.
Lancaster University, 2024. 234 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

Sammon, M 2024, 'Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices', PhD, Health Research, Faculty of Health and Medicine, Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2585

APA

Sammon, M. (2024). Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices. [Doctoral Thesis, Health Research, Faculty of Health and Medicine, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2585

Vancouver

Sammon M. Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices. Lancaster University, 2024. 234 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2585

Author

Sammon, Myles. / Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices. Lancaster University, 2024. 234 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{1d997cd0c7674e11b6ed011fbe22c19e,
title = "Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices",
abstract = "Negative voice content is a key predictor of distress for voice hearers. Understanding how voice hearers experience and cope with negative voice content is key to furthering clinical research and practice. Hearing voices is associated with increased risk of suicidal ideation (SI) and suicidalbehaviour (SB). Further work is needed to understand the relationship between negative self-talk, negative voice content, SI and SB in people who hear voices.Section one of this thesis reports a systematic literature review exploring how voice hearers experience and cope with negative voice content. A meta-ethnography synthesised 24 qualtative studies to produce four over-arching themes. The results show that negative voice content often relates to traumatic experiences, negative evaluations from self and others and current fears. This appears to mobilise social rank mentalities and voice hearers often cope through fight or flight mechanisms. Clinical and research implications are discussed.Section two reports an empirical study that explored the relationships between self-attacking thoughts and SI, and critical voices and SI, in people who hear voices. Additionally, the moderating role of self-compassion in these two relationships and the relationship between predictor variables and SB is explored. Self-attacking thoughts significantly predicted SI severity. Critical voices also significantly predicted SI severity. No significant moderating role of self-compassion was found and self-attacking thoughts or critical voices did not predict SB. Minoritsed gender and entrapment predicted SB. Findings suggest critical voices may be a key factor alongside entrapment in SI forpeople who hear voices. Clinical and research implications are discussed.Section three reports a critical appraisal including reflections on key challenges and the rationale for decisions made throughout the research process.",
keywords = "Hearing voices, negative voice content, coping with voices, auditory verbal hallucination (AVH), Suicide",
author = "Myles Sammon",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2585",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Health Research, Faculty of Health and Medicine, Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Self-Attacking Thoughts, Critical Voices and Suicide in People who Hear Voices

AU - Sammon, Myles

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Negative voice content is a key predictor of distress for voice hearers. Understanding how voice hearers experience and cope with negative voice content is key to furthering clinical research and practice. Hearing voices is associated with increased risk of suicidal ideation (SI) and suicidalbehaviour (SB). Further work is needed to understand the relationship between negative self-talk, negative voice content, SI and SB in people who hear voices.Section one of this thesis reports a systematic literature review exploring how voice hearers experience and cope with negative voice content. A meta-ethnography synthesised 24 qualtative studies to produce four over-arching themes. The results show that negative voice content often relates to traumatic experiences, negative evaluations from self and others and current fears. This appears to mobilise social rank mentalities and voice hearers often cope through fight or flight mechanisms. Clinical and research implications are discussed.Section two reports an empirical study that explored the relationships between self-attacking thoughts and SI, and critical voices and SI, in people who hear voices. Additionally, the moderating role of self-compassion in these two relationships and the relationship between predictor variables and SB is explored. Self-attacking thoughts significantly predicted SI severity. Critical voices also significantly predicted SI severity. No significant moderating role of self-compassion was found and self-attacking thoughts or critical voices did not predict SB. Minoritsed gender and entrapment predicted SB. Findings suggest critical voices may be a key factor alongside entrapment in SI forpeople who hear voices. Clinical and research implications are discussed.Section three reports a critical appraisal including reflections on key challenges and the rationale for decisions made throughout the research process.

AB - Negative voice content is a key predictor of distress for voice hearers. Understanding how voice hearers experience and cope with negative voice content is key to furthering clinical research and practice. Hearing voices is associated with increased risk of suicidal ideation (SI) and suicidalbehaviour (SB). Further work is needed to understand the relationship between negative self-talk, negative voice content, SI and SB in people who hear voices.Section one of this thesis reports a systematic literature review exploring how voice hearers experience and cope with negative voice content. A meta-ethnography synthesised 24 qualtative studies to produce four over-arching themes. The results show that negative voice content often relates to traumatic experiences, negative evaluations from self and others and current fears. This appears to mobilise social rank mentalities and voice hearers often cope through fight or flight mechanisms. Clinical and research implications are discussed.Section two reports an empirical study that explored the relationships between self-attacking thoughts and SI, and critical voices and SI, in people who hear voices. Additionally, the moderating role of self-compassion in these two relationships and the relationship between predictor variables and SB is explored. Self-attacking thoughts significantly predicted SI severity. Critical voices also significantly predicted SI severity. No significant moderating role of self-compassion was found and self-attacking thoughts or critical voices did not predict SB. Minoritsed gender and entrapment predicted SB. Findings suggest critical voices may be a key factor alongside entrapment in SI forpeople who hear voices. Clinical and research implications are discussed.Section three reports a critical appraisal including reflections on key challenges and the rationale for decisions made throughout the research process.

KW - Hearing voices

KW - negative voice content

KW - coping with voices

KW - auditory verbal hallucination (AVH)

KW - Suicide

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2585

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/2585

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -