Reporting Suicide
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Russell Brown and Damian Christie talk with Chief Coroner Neil Maclean surrounding the laws/ethics of suicide reporting and changes that may be around the corner.
1 Response
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"..and then there is this belief, in some circles, that if you put out information, any sort of information, about suicide, that will lead to copycat suicides. Now that's a point of view it's not actually a point of view that many, particularly in the mainstream media actually adhere to, they don't accept it's necessarily so."
Judge Neil Maclean
Many people interviewed after the suicide of a relative or friend have a tendency to simplify the issues; their grief can lead to their minimizing or ignoring significant factors. Studies show a high incidence of psychiatric disorders in suicide victims at the time of their death with the total figure ranging from 98%[13] to 87.3%[14] with mood disorders and substance abuse being the two most common. These are often undiagnosed or untreated and treatment can result in reductions in the suicide rate. Reports that minimize the impact of psychiatric disorders contribute to copycat suicides whereas reports that mention this factor and provide help-line contact numbers and advice for where sufferers may gain assistance can reduce suicides.
Surely classifying research as 'belief' and 'a point of view', 'in some circles', whilst similarly obscuring the opposing research and instead focusing on another 'point of view that many', 'particularly in the mainstream media actually adhere to' is
1. an unbalanced way to present the argument
2. largely dismissive of the role research should play in settling the debate.
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