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Suicide and the Internet

Overview of the relationship between suicide and internet use


Overview of the relationship between suicide and internet use

Suicide and the Internet have increasingly important relationships as Internet use becomes more ubiquitous.

Several Internet suicides have occurred, and issues involving social media and suicide have gained some attention. A survey has found that suicide-risk individuals who went online for suicide-related purposes, compared with online users who did not, reported greater suicide-risk symptoms, were less likely to seek help and perceived less social support. Jurisdictional hindrances have sometimes prevented governments from effectively restricting pro-suicide sites and sites that describe suicide methods. In 2008, police in the United Kingdom expressed concern that "Internet cults" and the desire for achieving prestige via online memorials may encourage suicides.

Although there are concerns that the Internet may be a dangerous platform, where suicidal people might find suicide methods or encouragement to kill themselves, research has shown that the internet is more likely to have a positive than a negative influence.

References

References

  1. Harris, Keith. (July 2009). "Examining Suicide-Risk Individuals Who Go Online for Suicide-Related Purposes". Archives of Suicide Research.
  2. Mishara, Brian L.. (2007). "Ethical, legal, and practical issues in the control and regulation of suicide promotion and assistance over the internet". Suicide & life-threatening behavior.
  3. Nick Britten and Richard Savill. (23 Jan 2008). "Police fear internet cult inspires teen suicides". Telegraph.
  4. Prior, Trevor. (August 2004). "Suicide Methods From the Internet". Am J Psychiatry.
  5. Kemp, C. G., & Collings, S. C. (2011). Hyperlinked suicide: Assessing the prominence and accessibility of suicide websites. Crisis, 32(3), 143-151. doi: 10.1027/0227-5910/a000068
  6. Harris, K. M. (2015). Life vs. death: The suicidal mind online. In E. Aboujaoude & V. Starcevic (Eds.), Mental Health in the Digital Age: Grave Dangers, Great Promise (pp. 135-151). New York, NY: Oxford University Press.
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