Gulf News

Experts warn of ‘suicide contagion’

Extensive coverage of highprofil­e deaths of Anthony Bourdain and Kate Spade might impact others struggling with thoughts of suicide, they say

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When news broke that celebrity chef and author Anthony Bourdain took his own life just three days after fashion icon Kate Spade killed herself, mental health experts raised concerns about the extensive news coverage that was sure to follow and how that might impact others struggling with thoughts of suicide.

“When I heard about Bourdain, I was sad for him and for all the people who were going to hear about it, and I am also sad for people who might be influenced by it,” said Madelyn Gould, a professor of epidemiolo­gy in child psychiatry at Columbia University.

Gould, who has studied “suicide contagion” for years, said research has shown that the phenom- enon is real and suggests that media coverage of celebrity deaths, in particular, can influence those who are vulnerable or at risk and can lead to a spike in suicide rates.

“The deaths of two high-profile people by suicide this week has much more of an impact than less well-known individual­s,” Gould said.

Suicide rates across the country increased almost 10 per cent — nearly 2,000 additional deaths — after the death in 2014 of actor Robin Williams, according to a study published in the journal PLOS One in February. Williams, 63, hanged himself in his Northern California home.

In the months following Marilyn Monroe’s death on August 5, 1962, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study found that suicide rates jumped 12 per cent in the United States compared to the previous year.

For someone contemplat­ing suicide, publishing details about the way someone killed themselves can be a triggering mechanism, said Doreen Marshall, vice president of programmes at the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.

“The details can fill in the picture,” she said.

The death of a highprofil­e figure can make matters more difficult because of the extensive coverage it brings, such as the kind that followed Bourdain’s death. He died of an apparent suicide at his hotel in eastern France, where he was filming a segment for his show on CNN called Parts Unknown.

“The impact feels much closer when it’s someone in the public eye because we feel we know them and we make assumption­s about their life,” Marshall said.

The deaths of Bourdain and Spade, who died at her Manhattan home, came the same week that a CDC report found that suicides have increased by more than 30 per cent since 1999 in half the states and is now the country’s 10th-leading cause of death.

In 2016, nearly 45,000 Americans 10 or older died by suicide, according to the CDC.

The CDC report also found that 54 per cent of people who died by suicide did not have a known diagnosed mental health condition at the time of their death.

Experts recommend journalist­s stay away from sensationa­list headlines and avoid discussing graphic details when covering suicides, especially those of celebritie­s or other high-profile figures.

Gould said reporters can also help minimise the risk of suicide contagion by discussing messages of resilience and hope in their stories and to encourage people to seek help.

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 ?? Photos by Bloomberg, AP and AFP ?? Asia Argento and Anthony Bourdain in 2017.
Photos by Bloomberg, AP and AFP Asia Argento and Anthony Bourdain in 2017.
 ??  ?? Kate Spade.
Kate Spade.

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