Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia
Vol. 29, No. 2

Religiosity and Attitudes toward Suicide Among Filipinos

Reyes, Marc Eric S. (Unknown)
Daluping, Therese Angelie C. (Unknown)
Dela Cruz, Omar Joseph SJ. (Unknown)
Estremadura, Sigmund Gabriel A. (Unknown)
Gavino, Jonah Emmanuel D. (Unknown)
Villanueva, Elaine G. (Unknown)
Jacob, Alvin L., III (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
20 Sep 2025

Abstract

Religiosity is generally negatively associated with attitudes toward suicide. Religious individuals typically have more negative attitudes toward suicide than individuals with lower levels of religiosity. This is partly due to the belief that suicide goes against many religious teachings that revere life as a sacred gift from God. Hence, using a cross-sectional, predictive design, we aimed to investigate the link between religiosity and suicide attitudes and how much religiosity predicts different suicide attitudes. Using non-probability convenience sampling, 1148 Filipino participants aged 18–65 completed an online test battery: Centrality of Religiosity Scale Interreligious form-20 and Attitudes Toward Suicide Scale. Results revealed that religiosity is significantly associated with and predicts eight suicide-related attitudes, namely, suicide as a right, incomprehensibility, preventability, tabooing, normal-common, suicidal process, preparedness to prevent, and resignation. These results indicate that religiosity primarily negatively predicts certain attitudes toward suicide among Filipinos. Our findings reveal the critical role that religiosity plays in Filipinos' attitudes toward suicide, which may have significant implications for preventing and understanding suicidality in the Philippines.

Copyrights © 2025






Journal Info

Abbrev

publication:hubsasia

Publisher

Subject

Description

Makara Human Behavior Studies in Asia or Makara Hubs-Asia is a regional journal that seeks to advance understanding of human behavior in the context of Asia through the publication of empirical research articles that may stimulate further research. The word Makara symbolizes the emblem of the ...