Department of Psychiatry, Douglas Mental Health University Institute, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
PLoS One. 2019 May 9;14(5):e0216543. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0216543. eCollection 2019.
Evidence suggests that suicide rates can increase following the suicide of a prominent celebrity or peer, sometimes known as 'suicide contagion'. The risk of contagion is especially high when media coverage is detailed and sensational. A recent study reported a 10% increase in U.S. suicides in the months following the suicide of comedian Robin Williams, who died in August 2014. The authors tentatively linked this increase to sensational media coverage; however, no content analysis of U.S. media was performed. As such, the aim of the present study is to formally examine the tone and content of U.S. newspaper coverage of Williams' suicide. The primary objective is to assess adherence to suicide reporting guidelines in U.S. newspapers after his suicide. The secondary objective is to identify common emerging themes discussed in these articles. The tertiary objective is to compare patterns of results in the U.S media with those in the Canadian media. Articles about Williams' suicide were collected from 10 U.S. newspapers in the 30-day period following his death using systematic retrieval software, which were then examined for adherence to suicide reporting recommendations. An inductive thematic analysis was also undertaken. A total of 63 articles were included in the study. We found that 100% of articles did not call it a 'successful' suicide, 96.8% did not use pejorative phrases and 71% did not say 'commit' suicide. However, only 11% included information about help-seeking, 27% tended to romanticize his suicide and 46% went into detail about the method. The most prominent emerging theme was Williams' struggles with mental illness and addiction. These findings suggest that U.S. newspapers moderately adhered to best practice recommendations when reporting Williams' suicide. Key recommendations were underapplied, which may have contributed to suicide contagion. New interventions targeting U.S. journalists and media may be needed to improve suicide reporting.
有证据表明,在知名名人或同辈自杀后,自杀率可能会上升,这种现象有时被称为“自杀传染”。当媒体报道详细且耸人听闻时,传染的风险尤其高。最近的一项研究报告称,在喜剧演员罗宾·威廉姆斯(Robin Williams)于 2014 年 8 月去世后的几个月中,美国的自杀人数增加了 10%。作者初步将这种增加与耸人听闻的媒体报道联系起来;但是,没有对美国媒体进行内容分析。因此,本研究的目的是正式检查美国报纸对威廉姆斯自杀的报道的语气和内容。主要目的是评估他自杀后美国报纸对自杀报告准则的遵守情况。次要目的是确定这些文章中讨论的常见主题。第三个目的是将美国媒体的结果模式与加拿大媒体的结果模式进行比较。使用系统检索软件在他去世后的 30 天内从 10 家美国报纸中收集了有关威廉姆斯自杀的文章,然后对这些文章进行了检查,以评估其对自杀报告建议的遵守情况。还进行了归纳主题分析。该研究共纳入了 63 篇文章。我们发现,100%的文章没有将其称为“成功”自杀,96.8%的文章没有使用贬义词,71%的文章没有说“自杀”。但是,只有 11%的文章包含有关寻求帮助的信息,27%的文章倾向于将他的自杀浪漫化,而 46%的文章详细介绍了方法。最突出的新兴主题是威廉姆斯与精神疾病和成瘾作斗争。这些发现表明,美国报纸在报道威廉姆斯的自杀事件时,适度地遵守了最佳实践建议。关键建议未得到充分应用,这可能导致了自杀传染。可能需要针对美国记者和媒体的新干预措施来改善自杀报道。