KFF Health News (8/20, Waldman) reports, “While it was once unheard-of to mention suicide as a cause of death in news obituaries and paid death notices, that has been changing, especially in the past 10 years, said Dan Reidenberg…managing director of the National Council for Suicide Prevention.” And “while there’s no right or wrong way to write death announcements, mental health and grief experts said the reluctance to acknowledge suicide has implications beyond the confines of a public notice,” as “the stigma attached to the word affects everything from how people grieve to how people help prevent others from ending their own lives.” Meanwhile, “research shows that talking about suicide can help reduce suicidal thoughts,” although “studies have also found that spikes in suicide rates can follow news reports about someone dying that way — a phenomenon known as ‘suicide contagion.’”
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