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      Newspaper Reporting on a Cluster of Suicides in the UK : A Study of Article Characteristics Using PRINTQUAL

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          Abstract

          Abstract. Background: Media reporting may influence suicide clusters through imitation or contagion. In 2008 there was extensive national and international newspaper coverage of a cluster of suicides in young people in the Bridgend area of South Wales, UK. Aims: To explore the quantity and quality of newspaper reporting during the identified cluster. Method: Searches were conducted for articles on suicide in Bridgend for 6 months before and after the defined cluster (June 26, 2007, to September 16, 2008). Frequency, quality (using the PRINTQUAL instrument), and sensationalism were examined. Results: In all, 577 newspaper articles were identified. One in seven articles included the suicide method in the headline, 47.3% referred to earlier suicides, and 44% used phrases that guidelines suggest should be avoided. Only 13% included sources of information or advice. Conclusion: A high level of poor-quality and sensationalist reporting was found during an ongoing suicide cluster at the very time when good-quality reporting could be considered important. A broad awareness of media guidelines and expansion and adherence to press codes of practice are required by journalists to ensure ethical reporting.

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          Media Roles in Suicide Prevention: A Systematic Review

          The aim of the current systematic review was to monitor and provide an overview of the research performed about the roles of media in suicide prevention in order to find out possible effects media reporting on suicidal behaviours might have on actual suicidality (completed suicides, attempted suicides, suicidal ideation). The systematic review was performed following the principles of the PRISMA statement and includes 56 articles. Most of the studies support the idea that media reporting and suicidality are associated. However, there is a risk of reporting bias. More research is available about how irresponsible media reports can provoke suicidal behaviours (the ‘Werther effect’) and less about protective effect media can have (the ‘Papageno effect’). Strong modelling effect of media coverage on suicide is based on age and gender. Media reports are not representative of official suicide data and tend to exaggerate sensational suicides, for example dramatic and highly lethal suicide methods, which are rare in real life. Future studies have to encounter the challenges the global medium Internet will offer in terms of research methods, as it is difficult to define the circulation of news in the Internet either spatially or in time. However, online media can provide valuable innovative qualitative research material.
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            Suicide in the media: a quantitative review of studies based on non-fictional stories.

            Research on the effect of suicide stories in the media on suicide in the real world has been marked by much debate and inconsistent findings. Recent narrative reviews have suggested that research based on nonfictional models is more apt to uncover imitative effects than research based on fictional models. There is, however, substantial variation in media effects within the research restricted to nonfictional accounts of suicide. The present analysis provides some explanations of the variation in findings in the work on nonfictional media. Logistic regression techniques applied to 419 findings from 55 studies determined that: (1) studies measuring the presence of either an entertainment or political celebrity were 5.27 times more likely to find a copycat effect, (2) studies focusing on stories that stressed negative definitions of suicide were 99% less likely to report a copycat effect, (3) research based on television stories (which receive less coverage than print stories) were 79% less likely to find a copycat effect, and (4) studies focusing on female suicide were 4.89 times more likely to report a copycat effect than other studies. The full logistic regression model correctly classified 77.3% of the findings from the 55 studies. Methodological differences among studies are associated with discrepancies in their results.
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              Suicide and the media. Part I: Reportage in nonfictional media.

              Numerous studies have considered the association between media reporting and portrayal of suicide and actual suicidal behavior or ideation. This review considered 42 studies that have examined the nonfiction media (newspapers, television, and books). Consideration was given to the extent to which inferences could be made about the relationship between portrayal of suicide in the given media and actual suicidal behavior in terms of: the strength of its association; and the extent to which it could be considered causal. The review demonstrated that there is an association between nonfictional media portrayal of suicide and actual suicide. The association satisfies sufficient of the criteria of consistency, strength, temporality, specificity and coherence for it to be deemed causal.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                cri
                Crisis
                The Journal of Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention
                Hogrefe Publishing
                0227-5910
                2151-2396
                July 22, 2016
                2017
                : 38
                : 1
                : 17-25
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Swansea University Medical School, Institute of Life Sciences 2, Swansea University, Swansea, UK
                [ 2 ]Centre for Suicide Research, Department of Psychiatry, Warnford Hospital, Oxford, UK
                [ 3 ]School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK
                [ 4 ]School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University, UK
                [ 5 ]Institute for Media and Communication Research, Bournemouth University, UK
                [ 6 ]Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh Medical School, UK
                [ 7 ]Public Health Wales National Health Service Trust, Cardiff, Wales, UK
                Author notes
                Ann John, Swansea University Medical School, 3rd Floor, Institute of Life Sciences 2, Swansea University, Singleton Park, Swansea, SA2 8PP, UK, Tel. +44 (0) 1792 602-568, Fax +44 (0) 1792 513-430, E-mail a.john@ 123456swansea.ac.uk
                Article
                cri_38_1_17
                10.1027/0227-5910/a000410
                a1d6426c-4f2d-4d97-b41b-9147c37a1bcb
                Copyright @ 2016
                History
                : July 6, 2015
                : February 28, 2016
                : March 2, 2016
                Categories
                Research Trends

                Emergency medicine & Trauma,Psychology,Health & Social care,Clinical Psychology & Psychiatry,Public health
                guidelines,suicide cluster,newspaper reporting

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