UCL Division of Psychiatry, University College London, 6th floor, Maple House, 149 Tottenham Court Road, London, W1T 7NF, UK.
Barnet Enfield & Haringey Mental Health NHS Trust, London, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Feb 20;20(1):176. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-8211-1.
Media guidelines on suicide reporting of suicide have two purposes: to prevent further suicides, and to minimise distress to the bereaved, who are themselves at increased risk of suicide. We aimed to describe the subjective experiences of people bereaved by suicide regarding media reporting of the suicide of their friend or relative.
We conducted a cross-sectional study of staff and students aged 18-40 at 37 United Kingdom higher educational institutions in 2010 to recruit adults who had experienced bereavement by the suicide of a close contact. We analysed free-text responses to a question probing experiences of the press after the suicide, using thematic analysis to identify key themes.
We analysed responses from 140 eligible respondents, and identified 3 main themes: value placed on respecting the privacy or wishes of the bereaved; respect accorded to the deceased; and the role of the press in promoting suicide prevention messages. Many respondents described negative experiences of the press, with sub-themes capturing distressing experiences relating to perceptions of journalists' intrusive behaviour, failure to consult appropriately with the bereaved, journalists releasing private information, negatively misrepresenting the deceased, and breaching the anonymity of the deceased or bereaved. We identified considerable variation in people's views over acceptable levels of detail reported in the press, and in some cases objections were in relation to journalists following media guidelines. These divergent views illustrate the tensions between the twin purposes of media guidelines: to prevent further suicides, and to protect the bereaved.
The findings from our British sample provide journalists with personal perspectives from bereaved relatives on the impact of media intrusion, speculation, and misrepresentation, and an insight into disparate views on the nature of information relatives feel comfortable disclosing. These findings suggest a need for journalists' training to include exposure to such views, to heighten awareness of potentially distressing effects and the nuances of bereaved people's preferences. This should aim to encourage journalists to consult with bereaved relatives more sensitively, whilst also remaining mindful of media guidelines on the reporting of suicide.
媒体关于自杀报道的指南有两个目的:防止更多的自杀发生,并尽量减少对死者亲属的痛苦,他们本身自杀的风险增加。我们旨在描述死者亲属对朋友或亲属自杀的媒体报道的主观感受。
我们在 2010 年对英国 37 所高等教育机构的 18-40 岁的工作人员和学生进行了一项横断面研究,以招募经历过亲密联系人自杀的成年人。我们分析了对自杀后媒体报道经历的问题的自由文本回复,使用主题分析来确定关键主题。
我们分析了 140 名符合条件的受访者的回复,确定了 3 个主要主题:尊重死者亲属隐私或意愿的价值;对死者的尊重;以及媒体在促进自杀预防信息方面的作用。许多受访者描述了媒体的负面经历,其中包括记者侵入行为、未能与死者亲属适当协商、记者发布私人信息、对死者的负面描述、以及侵犯死者或死者亲属的匿名权等令人痛苦的经历。我们发现,人们对媒体报道中可接受的详细程度的看法存在很大差异,在某些情况下,反对意见与记者遵守媒体指南有关。这些不同的观点说明了媒体指南的双重目的之间的紧张关系:防止更多的自杀发生,以及保护死者亲属。
我们的英国样本的研究结果为记者提供了来自死者亲属的个人观点,了解媒体介入、猜测和错误描述对他们的影响,以及对亲属感到舒适披露的信息性质的不同看法。这些发现表明,记者培训需要包括接触此类观点,提高对潜在痛苦影响的认识以及死者亲属偏好的细微差别。这应该旨在鼓励记者更敏感地与死者亲属协商,同时也要牢记媒体指南对自杀报道的规定。