ABSTRACT
Background
Suicidality is frequently examined through psychiatric or epidemiological lenses, with culture treated as a secondary factor or explanatory variable. This essay advances an alternative view, positioning culture as the lived horizon through which suffering is interpreted, narrated, and acted upon.
Aim
To examine how culturally grounded systems of meaning shape suicidal experience and to translate these insights into practical guidance for nursing suicide risk assessment and care.
Approach
Drawing on cross-cultural suicidology, narrative identity theory, and ethically constructed clinical illustrations, the essay explores suicidal meaning making across Indigenous, Japanese, and Muslim minority contexts. Suicide risk is framed as a narrative crisis in which a person’s life story constricts towards a single perceived ending while avoiding cultural essentialism.
Key Findings
Across contexts, cultural worlds shape how distress is voiced, which forms of disclosure feel permissible, and what protective anchors remain accessible. Clinically salient meanings include duty, shame, exile, faith, and belonging. Protective resources often emerge through land, language, ritual, creativity, spirituality, and community relationships.
Implications for Nursing Practice
Rather than offering causal explanations, the essay provides practice-oriented guidance for nurses. This includes culturally attuned listening, documentation of cultural resources alongside standard risk elements, collaboration with Elders or faith leaders when appropriate and with consent, and the use of relational and family-centred pathways of support.
Conclusion
Centring culture as the medium of meaning allows suicide assessment and care to become more accurate, humane, and responsive to patients’ lived worlds, supporting narrative reopening rather than symptom management alone.