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Journal Article

Citation

Rodríguez Rodríguez-Caro CJ, Acosta Artiles FJ, Cejas Méndez MR, Fernandez-Garcimartin H, González Martín JM. Rev. Esp. Salud Publica 2021; 95: e202104056.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Ministerio De Sanidad Y Consumo)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

33879763

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: News about suicide may cause a contagion effect or a protective effect. For this reason, the World Health Organization (WHO) has published recommendations on responsible media coverage of suicide. Certain characteristics of suicide news articles and their frequency have been associated to such effects. Despite their importance, these aspects have been scarcely studied in the Spanish media. The objective of this study was to identify the characteristics of suicide news articles in the Spanish digital media.
METHODS: We identified the adherence to WHO recommendations, avoidability, frequency, and typology of suicide news articles in the four main spanish digital media (El País, El Mundo, El Confidencial and ABC), according to Alexa (a website traffic statistics). Adherence was evaluated from a dichotomous and continuous perspective by using an ad hoc scale, and avoidability was conceptually defined. The evaluation period was 6 months (11/1/2016-04/30/2017). The statistical program used was R Core Team (2017).
RESULTS: We analysed 141 suicide news articles. Of these, 99.12% did not adhere to the recommendations, the degree of adherence was 2.97 (95% CI, 2.19-3.75; range between +22 and -22), 34.51% were avoidable, 34.04% were about "suicide after murder", and 90.04% about death by suicide.
CONCLUSIONS: Adherence to WHO recommendations is very low in suicide news articles. Furthermore, almost one third of them are avoidable. The identified profile points out the need for interventions aimed at the media. Besides, it allows adjusting their contents to the identified specific needs.


Language: es

Keywords

Humans; Risk factors; Mass Media; Spain; Internet; Suicide; Guidelines as Topic; World Health Organization; Mass media; Contagion effect; Guideline Adherence; Protective effect

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