TY - JOUR
T1 - Internet searches for a specific suicide method follow its high-profile media coverage
AU - Chang, Shu-Sen
AU - Page, Andrew
AU - Gunnell, David
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - To the Editor: Widespread media coverage of specific methods of suicide may lead to copycat deaths and could initiate changes in the popularity of particular methods. At-risk individuals may use the Internet to research particular methods of suicide (1, 2), and a person's choice of method can influence case fatality (3). However, there is little research into the impact of news reports of suicide on subsequent Internet search activity. We investigated the effect of media coverage of suicides by hydrogen sulfide gassing on trends in Internet searches in two countries. In Japan, news reports of three deaths using this method in late February 2008 were followed by more than 200 hydrogen sulfide suicides during the subsequent 4 months (4). This epidemic was thought to be fueled by information on the Internet about making the gas. In the United Kingdom, extensive media coverage on September 20, 2010, of a suicide pact using this method was followed by a second hydrogen sulfide suicide pact within 10 days and another in February 2011. We investigated search volume patterns from Google searches (http://www.google.com/insights/search) using the terms "suicide" and "hydrogen sulfide" (or "hydrogen sulphide"), filtering for Japan from January 2004 to January 2011 (Figure 1A) and for the United Kingdom from August 2009 to January 2011 (Figure 1B). The searches were performed in Japanese and English. Google provides a relative figure based on search activity for the study period but does not provide absolute numbers of searches. The month or week in the selected period with the highest number of searches is assigned the value 100, and other months/weeks are scaled accordingly.
AB - To the Editor: Widespread media coverage of specific methods of suicide may lead to copycat deaths and could initiate changes in the popularity of particular methods. At-risk individuals may use the Internet to research particular methods of suicide (1, 2), and a person's choice of method can influence case fatality (3). However, there is little research into the impact of news reports of suicide on subsequent Internet search activity. We investigated the effect of media coverage of suicides by hydrogen sulfide gassing on trends in Internet searches in two countries. In Japan, news reports of three deaths using this method in late February 2008 were followed by more than 200 hydrogen sulfide suicides during the subsequent 4 months (4). This epidemic was thought to be fueled by information on the Internet about making the gas. In the United Kingdom, extensive media coverage on September 20, 2010, of a suicide pact using this method was followed by a second hydrogen sulfide suicide pact within 10 days and another in February 2011. We investigated search volume patterns from Google searches (http://www.google.com/insights/search) using the terms "suicide" and "hydrogen sulfide" (or "hydrogen sulphide"), filtering for Japan from January 2004 to January 2011 (Figure 1A) and for the United Kingdom from August 2009 to January 2011 (Figure 1B). The searches were performed in Japanese and English. Google provides a relative figure based on search activity for the study period but does not provide absolute numbers of searches. The month or week in the selected period with the highest number of searches is assigned the value 100, and other months/weeks are scaled accordingly.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/532402
U2 - 10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.11020284
DO - 10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.11020284
M3 - Article
SN - 0002-953X
VL - 168
SP - 855
EP - 857
JO - American Journal of Psychiatry
JF - American Journal of Psychiatry
IS - 8
ER -