Burden and benefits-related suicides: “misperception” or state crafted reality?
Journal of Public Mental Health
ISSN: 1746-5729
Article publication date: 18 January 2022
Issue publication date: 10 February 2022
Abstract
Purpose
This article aims to focus on deaths by suicide in relation to UK welfare reform as a case study to question one of suicidology’s most dominant theories – the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide (Joiner, 2005) and its influential ideas on “perceived burdensomeness” – as well as wider ideologies on suicide and mental health reflected in this approach.
Design/methodology/approach
This article draws on evidence from disabled people’s campaigning groups (primary sources) and research literature (secondary sources), which shows the negative psychological impact of burden discourse and how this shows up in people’s accounts of feeling suicidal, in suicide notes and in family accounts of those who have died by suicide. It uses this evidence to problematise the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide (Joiner, 2005), specifically its ideas about “burden” as an individual misperception, and the assumption that suicide is always the outcome of mental health problems.
Findings
The findings highlight the systemic, intersectional and cumulative production of suicidality by governmental “welfare reform” in the UK, through positioning welfare claimants as “burdens” on society. They show that by locating the problem of burdensomeness in individual “misperceptions”, the Interpersonal Theory allows the government’s role in crafting stigmatisation and conditions of suicidality to be overlooked and to be reproduced.
Originality/value
The article raises urgent ethical questions about the application of approaches, such as the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide, to benefits-related suicides and calls for approaches to benefits-related harm and suicide to be rooted in social and disability justice.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
This research is part of the Deaths by Welfare project funded by Healing Justice London. The project, led by China Mills, has been co-designed by a team made up of and led by people lived experience of disability, chronic sickness, mental health, forced migration and displacement. Enormous thanks to John Pring for his close collaboration on the project, and to all those continuing to envision and fight for justice.
Citation
Mills, C. (2022), "Burden and benefits-related suicides: “misperception” or state crafted reality?", Journal of Public Mental Health, Vol. 21 No. 1, pp. 46-56. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPMH-09-2021-0124
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited