# Associations between self-compassion and suicidal ideation among college students: the serial mediating roles of meaning in life and psychological resilience and the moderating role of perceived stress

**Authors:** Yinpin Huang, Jianbin Chen, Jing Guan, Shuyi Zhao, Deng Pan

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1768876 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-03-13

## TL;DR

The study finds that self-compassion reduces suicidal thoughts in college students by boosting life meaning and resilience, especially under stress.

## Contribution

This paper introduces a serial mediation model linking self-compassion to suicidal ideation through meaning in life and psychological resilience.

## Key findings

- Self-compassion is negatively linked to suicidal ideation (β = −0.139, p = 0.004).
- Meaning in life and psychological resilience mediate the relationship between self-compassion and suicidal ideation (β = −0.008, p = 0.030).
- Higher perceived stress strengthens the link between self-compassion and meaning in life (β = 0.333, p < 0.001).

## Abstract

Suicidal ideation is a critical concern among college students. We examined self-compassion as a key protective quality and its links with suicidal ideation. Our model places meaning in life and psychological resilience in a serial path between these variables and treats perceived stress as a contextual factor.

We carried out a survey and asked students to complete the Positive and Negative Suicide Ideation Scale, the Self-Compassion Scale, the Meaning in Life Questionnaire, the short form of the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale and the short Perceived Stress Scale. With 905 valid questionnaires, we used partial least squares structural equation modeling to explore links among these variables.

Self-compassion and suicidal ideation moved in opposite directions at the direct path level (β = −0.139, p = 0.004). An indirect effect also ran through a chain that first involved meaning in life and then psychological resilience (β = −0.008, p = 0.030). The product term of self-compassion and perceived stress showed a positive link with meaning in life (β = 0.333, p < 0.001), and this link was stronger when students reported higher stress.

Overall, self-compassion shows a protective pattern for suicidal ideation through meaning in life and psychological resilience, especially in high-stress situations. These results give useful ideas for designing campus mental health programs for college students.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Suicidal ideation (MESH:D001072)

## Full text

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## References

76 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13021599/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13021599