An exploratory study of painful and provocative events and suicidality: The mediating role of physical dissociation and body insensitivity
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European Journal of Trauma & Dissociation
Abstract
This research study examined physical dissociation and body insensitivity as sequential mediators in the relationship
of painful and provocative events with suicidality. A sample of 290 American community adults (150
men, 140 women) participated. Mean age of participants was 37.24 years (SD = 11.51). We tested statistical
mediation effects, using path analysis in structural equation modeling. Physical dissociation and body insensitivity
fully mediated the relationship between painful and provocative events and suicide motivation and
partially mediated the relationship between painful and provocative events and suicide preparation. For both
models (suicide motivation and suicide preparation), body insensitivity partially mediated the relationship between
physical dissociation and suicidality. Results align closely with Orbach’s (1994) hypothesis that, to die by
suicide, an individual must overcome the pain and horror of death and that this can be facilitated through
physical dissociation and numbness that result from an individual being exposed to painful and traumatic events.
Based on these findings, clinical interventions that focus on addressing dissociation or body indifference may
have the potential to break the link between traumatic experiences and suicidality.