Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

‘13 Reasons’ sparks debate

Teens say Netflix series about suicide reflects their world

- ERIN RICHARDS

Last month when Kristin Kowalke’s son told her he was watching a new Netflix series, the Pewaukee mother of three decided to view the show herself. She was immediatel­y hooked on “13 Reasons Why,” the controvers­ial drama-mystery about a teenager who kills herself after creating tape recordings for the people who she says drove her to take her life.

Jordyn Kowalke, a senior at Pewaukee High School, re-watched many of the episodes with his mother and gamely fielded her questions. Were his classmates as mean to each other as the students depicted in the show? Are high school parties today really that crazy?

A number of Wisconsin school districts recently sent parents warnings about the hit series, which has been renewed for a second season. While the show has provided a platform for families like the Kowalkes to discuss important issues, many school-support staff and mental health clinicians are alarmed that it glamorizes suicide and portrays adults as inept, perpetuati­ng a myth that troubled young people have nowhere to turn.

Their biggest concern is that vulnerable young viewers may overidenti­fy with the lead character, Hannah Baker.

“It’s worrisome to be showing some of the key things that research says you do not do with suicide,” said Katherine Ballbach, a school psychologi­st in the Racine Unified School District. “You don’t have memorials. You don’t continue to expose someone to the graphic details of someone’s suicide. This show alone could be a contagion for youth at risk of suicide.”

The fear is particular­ly acute in Racine County, which has seen a spike in children committing suicide

“Adults don’t understand how things have changed since they were in high school.”

SAM GORAL, EAST TROY HIGH SENIOR

in recent years, according to school district officials.

Rates of youth suicide have also increased in Milwaukee County; it’s been the cause of death for six children this year alone. Records from the Milwaukee County medical examiner show that over the past decade, only about three children per year have died by suicide.

The novel upon which “13 Reasons” is based — written by Jay Asher and published in 2007 — hasn’t generated the same amount of controvers­y as the Netflix series. Brian Wegener, an English teacher at East Troy High School, has taught the novel in his literature class but hasn’t worried that it would trigger students to take any dangerous actions in real life.

“The backlash seems much more intense than any objections I remember from the novel’s first days,” Wegener said. “I’m not sure if that is a result of TV’s wider influence or a result of difference­s in the two portrayals (of the story).”

One important difference is the portrayal of the suicide. The book says Hannah swallowed “a handful of pills.” Netflix shows close-ups of her slitting her wrists in a bathtub. Some experts worried the scene made suicide look almost serene, instead of painful.

Still, millions of adolescent and teenage viewers identify with the show, and fans say it raises awareness of serious subjects such as sexual assault, bullying and the drama of youth relationsh­ips. But many parents didn’t realize that those issues are depicted in more graphic detail in “13 Reasons” than they were in most of the movies and TV shows they watched as young people.

Sam Goral, an East Troy senior in Wegener’s class, said the series accurately depicts today’s high school environmen­t.

“With all of the technology now it just becomes easier to spread rumors, pictures and talk to people,” he said. “Adults don’t understand how things have changed since they were in high school. Everything now is public, everyone knows everything about anyone, and this show depicts this more than any other show or book.”

Dovetailin­g with the series’ popularity is the sobering fact that nationwide rates of youth suicide and rates of children contemplat­ing suicide have steadily increased over the past few decades. A new study shows the percentage of kids and teenagers hospitaliz­ed for expressing suicidal thoughts has more than doubled since 2008, with the largest uptick among teen girls.

Gregory Plemmons, the lead author of the study, is an associate professor of hospital pediatrics at Nashville, Tenn.’s Monroe Carell Jr. Children’s Hospital at Vanderbilt University. He said back in 2008 and 2009, he’d routinely see two or three kids waiting in the emergency room for placement because of suicidal thoughts or serious selfharm.

Recently, he counted 22 children in the ER waiting for such placement.

Plemmons said Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin did not have an increase in hospitaliz­ations for suicidal youth. That could be because other medical centers, such as Rogers Memorial Hospital and Aurora Health Care’s behavioral health clinics, are the first point of contact for such patients.

Himanshu Agrawal, a child and adolescent psychiatri­st at Children’s Hospital, said “13 Reasons” does some things well, such as accurately portraying the narrow line many girls today walk between being considered attractive or promiscuou­s, the harsh realities of sexual assault, the fake sense of loyalty exhibited between many boys and the subtle ways that teens can harm others by being bystanders.

But Agrawal and other counselors criticized the series for not portraying mental illness in the main character. In real life, the vast majority of people who attempt or complete suicide have serious depression and/or other mental illnesses.

“I do not want to minimize the impact of bullying, but it’s usually just one risk factor,” Agrawal said.

As all of these concerns bubbled up to school district administra­tors, notes and automated phone calls reached parents in recent weeks in many suburban Milwaukee districts.

“It seemed to bubble up really quickly,” said Ted Noll, Cedarburg School District’s director of pupil services. “But now that most districts have put out letters, we’re hoping the collective understand­ing of all of this will grow.”

Just in time for season two.

 ?? MICHAEL SEARS / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Kristin Kowalke and her son, Jordyn Kowalke, 17, a senior at Pewaukee High School, watched episodes of “13 Reasons Why,” a Netflix series about a teenager who kills herself. School districts recently sent parents warnings about the hit series.
MICHAEL SEARS / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Kristin Kowalke and her son, Jordyn Kowalke, 17, a senior at Pewaukee High School, watched episodes of “13 Reasons Why,” a Netflix series about a teenager who kills herself. School districts recently sent parents warnings about the hit series.

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