Reuters (7/30, Carroll) reports, “How the media reports on suicides may impact whether others decide to kill themselves in the days following the original death,” researchers concluded after gathering and analyzing “print and online reports published in the Toronto media market from 2011 to 2014,” then looking at “a list of people who died by suicide in Toronto between January 1, 2011 and December 31, 2014.” The findings were published online July 30 in CMAJ.
According to TIME (7/30, Ducharme), the study suggested that “some specific journalistic practices – such as including lots of details about a death by suicide, or glamorizing these incidents – may make suicide contagion worse.”
HealthDay (7/30) reports the author of an accompanying editorial said, “I think everybody should think twice about sharing stories about a suicide.” The editorialist added, “Sharing positive stories with information about how to get help has the potential to be really helpful.” But, “stories about a celebrity suicide or stories that describe a suicide method could be very dangerous.
Related Links:
— “Suicide details reported by the media may lead others to copy, “Linda Carroll, Reuters, July 30, 2018.