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Recommendations to the Media for Suicide Reporting
From The American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
The media can play a powerful role in educating the public about suicide
prevention. Stories about suicide can inform readers and viewers about the
likely causes of suicide, its warning signs, trends in suicide rates, and recent
treatment advances.
They can also highlight opportunities to prevent suicide. Media stories about
individual deaths by suicide may be newsworthy and need to be covered, but they
also have the potential to do harm. Implementation of recommendations for media
coverage of suicide has been shown to decrease suicide rates.1,2
Certain ways of describing suicide in the news contribute to what behavioral
scientists call "suicide contagion" or "copycat" suicides.7,9
Research suggests that inadvertently romanticizing suicide or idealizing
those who take their own lives by portraying suicide as a heroic or romantic act
may encourage others to identify with the victim.6
Exposure to suicide method through media reports can encourage vulnerable
individuals to imitate it.10
Clinicians believe the danger is even greater if there is a detailed
description of the method. Research indicates that detailed descriptions or
pictures of the location or site of a suicide encourage imitation.1
Presenting suicide as the inexplicable act of an otherwise healthy or
high-achieving person may encourage identification with the victim.6
SUICIDE AND MENTAL ILLNESS
Did you know?
Over 90 percent of suicide victims have a significant psychiatric illness at
the time of their death. These are often undiagnosed, untreated, or both. Mood
disorders and substance abuse are the two most common.11-15
When both mood disorders and substance abuse are present, the risk for
suicide is much greater, particularly for adolescents and young adults.14,15
Research has shown that when open aggression, anxiety or agitation is present
in individuals who are depressed, the risk for suicide increases
significantly.16-18
The cause of an individual suicide is invariably more complicated than a
recent painful event such as the break-up of a relationship or the loss of a
job.
An individual suicide cannot be adequately explained as the understandable
response to an individual’s stressful occupation, or an individual’s membership
in a group encountering discrimination. Social conditions alone do not explain a
suicide.19-20
People who appear to become suicidal in response to such events, or in
response to a physical illness, generally have significant underlying mental
problems, though they may be well-hidden.12
Questions to ask:
Had the victim ever received treatment for depression or any other mental
disorder?
Did the victim have a problem with substance abuse?
Angles to pursue:
Conveying that effective treatments for most of these conditions are
available (but underutilized) may encourage those with such problems to seek
help.
Acknowledging the deceased person’s problems and struggles as well as the
positive aspects of his/her life or character contributes to a more balanced
picture.
INTERVIEWING SURVIVING RELATIVES AND FRIENDS
Research shows that, during the period immediately after a death by suicide,
grieving family members or friends have difficulty understanding what happened.
Responses may be extreme, problems may be minimized, and motives may be
complicated.21
Studies of suicide based on in-depth interviews with those close to the
victim indicate that, in their first, shocked reaction, friends and family
members may find a loved one’s death by suicide inexplicable or they may deny
that there were warning signs.22,23 Accounts based on these initial reactions
are often unreliable.
Angles to Pursue:
Thorough investigation generally reveals underlying problems unrecognized
even by close friends and family members. Most victims do however give warning
signs of their risk for suicide (see Resources).
Some informants are inclined to suggest that a particular individual, for
instance a family member, a school, or a health service provider, in some way
played a role in the victim’s death by suicide. Thorough investigation almost
always finds multiple causes for suicide and fails to corroborate a simple
attribution of responsibility.
Concerns:
Dramatizing the impact of suicide through descriptions and pictures of
grieving relatives, teachers or classmates or community expressions of grief may
encourage potential victims to see suicide as a way of getting attention or as a
form of retaliation against others.
Using adolescents on TV or in print media to tell the stories of their
suicide attempts may be harmful to the adolescents themselves or may encourage
other vulnerable young people to seek attention in this way.
LANGUAGE
Referring to a "rise" in suicide rates is usually more accurate than calling
such a rise an "epidemic," which implies a more dramatic and sudden increase
than what we generally find in suicide rates.Research has shown that the use in
headlines of the word suicide or referring to the cause of death as
self-inflicted increases the likelihood of contagion.3
Recommendations for language:
Whenever possible, it is preferable to avoid referring to suicide in the
headline. Unless the suicide death took place in public, the cause of death
should be reported in the body of the story and not in the headline.
In deaths that will be covered nationally, such as of celebrities, or those
apt to be covered locally, such as persons living in small towns, consider
phrasing for headlines such as: "Marilyn Monroe dead at 36," or "John Smith dead
at 48."
Consideration of how they died could be reported in the body of the article.
In the body of the story, it is preferable to describe the deceased as "having
died by suicide," rather than as "a suicide," or having "committed suicide." The
latter two expressions reduce the person to the mode of death, or connote
criminal or sinful behavior.
Contrasting "suicide deaths" with "non-fatal attempts" is preferable to using
terms such as "successful," "unsuccessful" or "failed."
SPECIAL SITUATIONS
Celebrity Deaths
Celebrity deaths by suicide are more likely than non-celebrity deaths to
produce imitation.24 Although suicides by celebrities will receive prominent
coverage, it is important not to let the glamour of the individual obscure any
mental health problems or use of drugs.
Homicide-Suicides
In covering murder-suicides be aware that the tragedy of the homicide can
mask the suicidal aspect of the act. Feelings of depression and hopelessness
present before the homicide and suicide are often the impetus for both.25,26
Suicide Pacts
Suicide pacts are mutual arrangements between two people who kill themselves
at the same time, and are rare. They are not simply the act of loving
individuals who do not wish to be separated. Research shows that most pacts
involve an individual who is coercive and another who is extremely dependent.27
Developed in collaboration with the office of the Surgeon General, Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, National Institute of Mental Health,
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, World Health
Organization, National Swedish Centre for Suicide Research, New Zealand Youth
Suicide Prevention Strategy
These recommendations were produced in the spirit of the public-private
partnership recommended by the Surgeon General’s National Strategy for Suicide
Prevention.We would like to thank the many journalists and news editors who
assisted us in this project.
http://www.afsp.org/education/recommendations/5/index.html


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