| Literature DB >> 27515312 |
Jing Ma1, Wei Zhang2, Keith Harris3,4, Qiang Chen1, Xiaolin Xu1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Social media and online environments are becoming increasingly popular and integral to modern lives. The online presentation of suicidal behaviors is an example of the importance of communication technologies, and the need for professionals to respond to a changing world. These types of behaviors, however, have rarely been scientifically analyzed. This study aimed to examine the behaviors of both suicide broadcasters and their audience, with attention on prevention/crisis opportunities.Entities:
Keywords: Crisis response; Cyberbully; Live-blogcast suicide; Online behaviors; Social media; Suicidal communications; Suicide prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27515312 PMCID: PMC4982431 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3415-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Emerging adults live-blogcast suicide incidents in Chinese Weibo
| Case | Duration | Location | Sex | Age | PE | Method | Result | Participants |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 5/16/2011 | Shaanxi | Male | 24 | Family conflicts | Wrist-cutting | Rescued | Active audience, newspaper reporter, roommate, police |
| 14:28-23:00 | ||||||||
| 2 | 9/1/2011 | Hubei | Male | 24 | Break-up (likely) | Overdose | Died | Active audience, colleagues and fans, family members |
| 01:07-19:23 | ||||||||
| 3 | 10/23/2011 | Beijing | Female | 22 | Break-up | Overdose | Rescued | Active audience, police |
| 22:13-1:20 | ||||||||
| 4 | 3/7/2012 | Sichuan | Female | 22 | Break-up | Wrist-cutting | Rescued | Active audience, friends and ex-colleagues, family members, police |
| 02:50-6:00 | ||||||||
| 5 | 11/30/2014 | Sichuan | Male | 19 | Break-up | Charcoal-burning & Overdose | Died | Active audience, friends, family members, police |
| 07:48-14:00 | ||||||||
| 6 | 12/1/2014 | Fujian | Male | 19 | Health and family issues | Overdose | Rescued | Active audience (celebrity), police |
| 17:00-21:30 |
Note: The duration began from the time when the blogcaster posted suicide-related information and ended with his/her last relevant post, excluding those messages indicating negative mood in general. PE precipitating event
Fig. 1The stages of live blogcast suicide events
Classification of participants’ behaviors towards the original message
| Behaviors | Participant type | Translated examples |
|---|---|---|
| Offering care and showing empathy | Active audience | Case 1: “I hope this stranger is just unable to get over only for a while. Please think about your family and your friends. How miserable they will be if you committed suicide”. “Suicide is an irresponsible way to yourself and the people who love you”. |
| Peers | ||
| Searching useful information, calling for information and help | Active audience | Case 1: “His IP and telephone show that he is in Yulin. Call the police now.” |
| Peers, police | Case 4: “Anyone in Chengdu happens to know the suicide broadcaster? Call the police immediately!”; “The policeman called me again but I really don’t know the situation.” | |
| Making cynical or indifferent comments, “like” and incitement | Active audience | Case 3: “She must do this (referring to the suicidal behaviors on Weibo) for fame”, “God knows?!” |
| Case 5: “Why are you (referring to the suicide broadcaster) still alive?” | ||
| Case 6: “This person deserves to die.” | ||
| Expressing shocked feelings | Active audience | Case 1: “Horrible! I could not fall asleep tonight.” |
| On-site rescue actions | Peers, Parents, Police | All the 6 cases: Rush to the suicidal location for rescue |