Results (
Thai) 2:
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There are some protective or resilience factors that can help
prevent suicide and people who are recovering following an attempt.
These protective resilience factors include (1) developing positive
coping strategies could prevent re-attempts, (2) participating in
sporting activities, (3) developing healthy family relationships, (4)
providing supportive school environments, (5) accessing social
psychiatric professionals were selected for interview to reach
saturation of the data. Moreover, when this study achieved data
saturation, the researcher added three more participants to confirm
that this study had really achieved saturation. That is, no new
concept was elicited in the three participants. The total number of
participants in this study was 20 participants including patients who
were healing from suicide attempts (n = 14) and their caregivers
(n = 6). The inclusion criteria for the patient sample included
having a diagnosis of depression and a suicide attempt that
happened more than 1 year ago. The inclusion criterion for the
caregiver was people who were suicidal individuals' family or curer
who helped them heal from their suicide attempts.
The demographic details of patients were as follows: women
(n = 10), men (n = 4); ages between 22 and 83 years; religion
(n = 9), non-religion (n = 5); university education (n = 6), senior
high (n = 4), junior high (n = 2), 5-year junior college (n = 2);
married (n = 7), divorced (n = 3), widowed (n = 3), single (n =1);
employed (n = 11), unemployed (n = 3); and previous suicide
attempts: 1 to 3 times (n = 12), 4 to 6 times (n = 1), 7 to 9 times
(n = 1). The demographic details of caregivers were as follows:
women (n = 3), men (n = 3); ages between 22 and 46 years;
university education (n = 5), 5-year junior college (n = 1); married
(n = 5), single (n = 1); patients' psychiatrists (n = 3), patients'
daughters (n = 2), patient's psychiatric nurse (n = 1).
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