Robinson Jo, Bailey Eleanor, Hetrick Sarah, Paix Steve, O'Donnell Matt, Cox Georgina, Ftanou Maria, Skehan Jaelea
Orygen, The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Centre for Youth Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.
String Theory Creative, Melbourne, Australia.
JMIR Ment Health. 2017 Oct 4;4(4):e40. doi: 10.2196/mental.7847.
Social media is increasingly being used by young people for health-related issues, including communicating about suicide. Due to the concerns about causing distress or inducing suicidal thoughts or behaviors, to date young people neither have been engaged in the development of social media-based suicide prevention interventions nor have interventions focused on educating young people about safe ways to communicate about suicide online. Given the potential that social media holds to deliver messages to vast numbers of people across space and time and the fact that young people often prefer to seek help from their friends and peers, safely educating and engaging young people to develop suicide prevention messages that can be delivered via social media is an obvious next step.
The objectives of this study were to (1) provide education to a small number of secondary school students about safe ways to communicate about suicide via social media; (2) engage the same young people in the development of a suite of social media-based suicide prevention multimedia messages; (3) assess the impact of this on participants; and (4) assess the acceptability and safety of the messages developed.
This study involved two phases. In phase 1, 20 participants recruited from two schools took part in an 8- to 10-week program during which they were provided with psychoeducation about mental health and suicide, including how to talk safely about suicide online, and they were then supported to design and develop their own media messages. These participants completed an evaluation questionnaire at the conclusion of the program. In phase 2, a larger group of participants (n=69), recruited via an opt-in process, viewed the media messages and completed a short questionnaire about each one.
Participants in phase 1 enjoyed the program and reported that they learned new skills, such as how to talk safely about suicide online, and felt more able to provide emotional support to others (16/20, 80%). No participants reported that the program made them feel suicidal. Participants in phase 2 generally rated the media messages as safe and acceptable, although some messages were rated more highly than others.
This study suggests that young people can be safely engaged in developing suicide prevention messages, which can be disseminated via social media. Engaging young people in this process may improve the traction that such campaigns will have with other young people. The study also suggests that educating young people regarding how to talk safely about suicide online has multiple benefits and is not associated with distress. Overall, these findings pave the way for new approaches to prevent suicide among young people.
年轻人越来越多地使用社交媒体来处理与健康相关的问题,包括交流自杀相关事宜。由于担心造成困扰或引发自杀念头及行为,到目前为止,年轻人既未参与基于社交媒体的自杀预防干预措施的开发,也没有干预措施侧重于教育年轻人如何在网上安全地交流自杀相关问题。鉴于社交媒体有潜力跨越时空向大量人群传递信息,且年轻人通常更倾向于向朋友和同龄人寻求帮助,下一步显然是安全地教育和促使年轻人开发可通过社交媒体传递的自杀预防信息。
本研究的目的是:(1)向少数中学生提供关于通过社交媒体安全交流自杀相关问题的教育;(2)让这些年轻人参与开发一套基于社交媒体的自杀预防多媒体信息;(3)评估这对参与者的影响;(4)评估所开发信息的可接受性和安全性。
本研究包括两个阶段。在第一阶段,从两所学校招募的20名参与者参加了一个为期8至10周的项目,在此期间,他们接受了关于心理健康和自杀的心理教育,包括如何在网上安全地谈论自杀,然后在支持下设计和开发他们自己的媒体信息。这些参与者在项目结束时完成了一份评估问卷。在第二阶段,通过选择加入的方式招募了一组更大的参与者(n = 69),他们观看了媒体信息,并针对每条信息完成了一份简短问卷。
第一阶段的参与者喜欢这个项目,并报告说他们学到了新技能,比如如何在网上安全地谈论自杀,并且感觉更有能力为他人提供情感支持(16/20,80%)。没有参与者报告该项目让他们有自杀的感觉。第二阶段的参与者总体上认为这些媒体信息是安全且可接受的,尽管有些信息的评分比其他信息更高。
本研究表明,可以安全地让年轻人参与开发自杀预防信息,这些信息可通过社交媒体传播。让年轻人参与这个过程可能会提高此类活动对其他年轻人的吸引力。该研究还表明,教育年轻人如何在网上安全地谈论自杀有多重益处,且不会造成困扰。总体而言,这些发现为预防年轻人自杀的新方法铺平了道路。