"

Media Recommendations

Click the play button to hear this text conversation read aloud.

 

General Concerns and Recommendations Regarding the Reporting of Suicide and Suicide Contagion
  • Suicide is often newsworthy, and it will probably be reported. The mission of a news organization is to report to the public information on events in the community. If a suicide is considered newsworthy, it will probably be reported. Healthcare providers should realize that efforts to prevent news coverage may not be effective, and their goal should be to assist news professionals in their efforts toward responsible and accurate reporting.
  • “No comment” is not a productive response to media representatives who are covering a suicide story. Refusing to speak with the media does not prevent coverage of suicide; rather, it precludes an opportunity to influence what will be contained in the report. Nevertheless, public officials should not feel obligated to provide an immediate answer to difficult questions. They should, however, be prepared to provide a reasonable timetable for giving such answers or be able to direct the media to someone who can provide the answers.
  • All parties should understand that a scientific basis exists for concern that news coverage of suicide may contribute to the causation of suicide. Efforts by persons trying to minimize suicide contagion are easily misinterpreted. Health officials must take the time to explain the carefully established, scientific basis for their concern about suicide contagion and how the potential for contagion can be reduced by responsible reporting.
  • Some characteristics of news coverage of suicide may contribute to contagion, and other characteristics may help prevent suicide. Clinicians and researchers acknowledge that it is not news coverage of suicide per se, but certain types of news coverage, that promote contagion. Persons concerned with preventing suicide contagion should be aware that certain characteristics of news coverage, rather than news coverage itself, should be avoided.
  • Health professionals or other public officials should not try to tell reporters what to report or how to write the news regarding suicide. If the nature and apparent mechanisms of suicide contagion are understood, the news media are more likely to present the news in a manner that minimizes the likelihood of such contagion. Instead of dictating what should be reported, public officials should explain the potential for suicide contagion associated with certain types of reports, and they should suggest ways to minimize the risk for contagion.
  • Public officials and the news media should carefully consider what is to be said and reported regarding suicide. Reporters generally present the information that they are given. Impromptu comments about a suicide by a public official can result in harmful news coverage. Given the potential risks, public officials and the media should seek to minimize these risks by carefully considering what is to be said and reported regarding suicide.

 

Aspects of News Coverage That Can Promote Suicide Contagion
  • Presenting simplistic explanations for suicide. Suicide is never the result of a single factor or event, but rather results from a complex interaction of many factors and usually involves a history of psychosocial problems. Public officials and the media should carefully explain that the final precipitating event was not the only cause of a given suicide. Most persons who have died by suicide have had a history of problems that may not have been acknowledged during the acute aftermath of the suicide. Cataloging the problems that could have played a causative role in a suicide is not necessary, but acknowledgment of these problems is recommended.
  • Engaging in repetitive, ongoing, or excessive reporting of suicide in the news. Repetitive and ongoing coverage, or prominent coverage, of a suicide tends to promote and maintain a preoccupation with suicide among at-risk persons, especially among persons 15–24 years of age. This preoccupation appears to be associated with suicide contagion. Information presented to the media should include the association between such coverage and the potential for suicide contagion. Public officials and media representatives should discuss alternative approaches for coverage of newsworthy suicide stories.
  • Providing sensational coverage of suicide. By its nature, news coverage of a suicidal event tends to heighten the general public’s preoccupation with suicide. This reaction is also believed to be associated with contagion and the development of suicide clusters. Public officials can help minimize sensationalism by limiting, as much as possible, morbid details in their public discussions of suicide. News media professionals should attempt to decrease the prominence of the news report and avoid the use of dramatic photographs related to the suicide (e.g., photographs of the funeral, the deceased person’s bedroom, and the site of the suicide).
  • Reporting “how-to” descriptions of suicide. Describing technical details about the method of suicide is undesirable. For example, reporting that a person died from carbon monoxide poisoning may not be harmful; however, providing details of the mechanisms and procedures of the suicide may facilitate imitation of the suicidal behavior by other at-risk persons.
  • Presenting suicide as a tool for accomplishing certain ends. Suicide is usually a rare act of a troubled or depressed person. Presentation of suicide as a means of coping with personal problems (e.g., the break-up of a relationship or retaliation against parental discipline) may suggest suicide as a potential coping mechanism to at-risk persons. Although such factors often seem to trigger a suicidal act, other psychopathological problems are almost always involved. If suicide is presented as an effective means for accomplishing specific ends, it may be perceived by a potentially suicidal person as an attractive solution.
  • Glorifying suicide or persons who die by suicide. News coverage is less likely to contribute to suicide contagion when reports of community expressions of grief (e.g., public eulogies, flying flags at half-mast, and erecting permanent public memorials) are minimized. Such actions may contribute to suicide contagion by suggesting to susceptible persons that society is honoring the suicidal behavior of the deceased person, rather than mourning the person’s death.
  • Focusing only on the individual’s positive characteristics. Empathy for family and friends often leads to a focus on reporting the positive aspects of the individual’s life. For example, friends or teachers may be quoted as saying the deceased person “was a great kid” or “had a bright future,” and they avoid mentioning the troubles and problems that the deceased person experienced. As a result, statements venerating the deceased person are often reported in the news. However, if the individual’s problems are not acknowledged in the presence of these laudatory statements, suicidal behavior may appear attractive to other at-risk persons—especially those who rarely receive positive reinforcement for desirable behaviors.
See also:

Suicide Contagion and Reporting Suicide National Workshop Recommendations for Media (printable handout)

AFSP/SPRC. (2018). After a Suicide: A Toolkit for Schools. http://afsp.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/toolkit.pdf

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2001, May 2). Suicide contagion and the reporting of suicide: Recommendations from a national workshop. http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00031529.htm

Haberyan, A. & Kibler, J. (2008). Suicide Prevention Training Manual. Northwest Missouri State University.

Higher Education Mental Health Alliance (2014, June). Postvention: A
Guide for Response to Suicide on College Campuses. https://hemha.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/jed-hemha-postvention-guide.pdf


Do you or someone you know need help now?

progress bar part five

License

Ask, Listen, Refer: Online Suicide Prevention Training Program Copyright © by Cathleen ONeal. All Rights Reserved.

Share This Book