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Media coverage of a celebrity suicide can cause a large-scale copycat effect

09.02.14 | Wiley

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Researchers who analyzed media coverage of the suicide of a national actress in South Korea and its impact on subsequent suicides found that the number of suicide-related articles surged around 80 times in the week after a suicide compared with the week prior.

Many articles (37.1%) violated several critical items on the World Health Organization suicide reporting guidelines, like containing a detailed suicide method. The investigators estimated that there were approximately 430 excess suicides during the 4 weeks after her death due to media coverage.

"This figure is the largest record of cases relating to copycat suicides that has been reported to academic journals," said Weon-Young Lee, co-author of the Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior study. "Most gender and age subgroups were at significantly higher risk of suicide.

Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior

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Nicole Weingartner
nweingartn@wiley.com

How to Cite This Article

APA:
Wiley. (2014, September 2). Media coverage of a celebrity suicide can cause a large-scale copycat effect. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1GN6V9RL/media-coverage-of-a-celebrity-suicide-can-cause-a-large-scale-copycat-effect.html
MLA:
"Media coverage of a celebrity suicide can cause a large-scale copycat effect." Brightsurf News, Sep. 2 2014, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/1GN6V9RL/media-coverage-of-a-celebrity-suicide-can-cause-a-large-scale-copycat-effect.html.