| Literature DB >> 32157324 |
Lucy Biddle1,2, Jane Derges3, Carlie Goldsmith4, Jenny L Donovan3, David Gunnell3,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Internet use is common among people with suicidal feelings and a considerable amount of suicide help material is available online. Despite attempts to promote formal help sites (e.g. governmental and charity sector) in internet search results, users' evaluation of these sites is lacking. This study, therefore, aimed to explore distressed users' perceptions of formal online help and their experiences of using this in times of crisis.Entities:
Keywords: Help-seeking; Internet; Qualitative research; Self-harm; Suicide
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32157324 PMCID: PMC7471153 DOI: 10.1007/s00127-020-01852-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol ISSN: 0933-7954 Impact factor: 4.328
Participant characteristics
| Characteristic | Community-based young people (YP) ( | Hospital patients (SH) ( | Community-based adults (SM) ( |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| Male | 6 | 8 | 8 |
| Female | 7 | 12 | 12 |
| Age (years) | |||
| 18–34 | 13 | 13 | 8 |
| 35–54 | – | 7 | 10 |
| 55+ | – | – | 2 |
| Range | 22–24 | 19–51 | 21–69 |
| Mean | 23 | 31.6 | a |
| Suicide attempts | |||
| Unclear | 2 | 0 | 0 |
| None | 8 | 1 | 8 |
| 1–3 | 3 | 11 | 4 |
| 3 or more | 0 | 8 | 8 |
| Self-reported life-time psychiatric disorder | |||
| Yes | 8 | 15 | 19 |
| No | 5 | 5 | 1 |
aNot available since for some participants, only age category was collected
Data extracts illustrating key themes relating to the limitations of signposting
| Theme | Data extract |
|---|---|
| Old/‘ineffective’ solution | A lot of [sites] kind of, if you clicked in the seek help thing, it will say, ‘oh here’s the number for [charity]’, which I kind of had… and antidepressants and everything and just kind of like, ‘that should help’ but that’s help I’m already getting (SH6) The only solutions the internet give you is ‘go to a doctor’ and from my experience of going to doctors it doesn’t really help in the short-term. You just end up waiting months and months and months to find a solution (SH18) When it feels like you’re constantly getting back to the same places or constantly making the same phone calls it gets kind of a bit—you sort of start thinking that maybe this can’t be helped (YP13) |
| Barriers to following signposts | They don’t actually help you on the site, they help you find the help. And if people are feeling like they don’t want to live anymore, why would they make the effort then, once you’ve already made the effort to look for online help, why are you then going to do something else and pick up the phone… it’s so much effort when it’s easier to go the other way. (SH8) I think it’s so important to have self-help on the internet… it takes nothing to log onto the internet and have a look, but it took me all of my kind of courage and reserves and everything to ring the doctors. To actually go to the doctors. To get over my social anxiety, to go for therapy with somebody that I didn’t know. It is a big ask. (YP4) |
| Limited use in crisis | There’s no valid advice online telling you, ‘try this’… it’s all very well like ‘go and speak to your doctor’ but they are only open nine until five. That doesn’t help you at 10 o’clock that night when all you can think about is going down into the kitchen and getting a knife (YP1) When you actually read what they [NHS Choices] have to say, it’s signposting… not what I would consider to be crisis interventions. When you are two hours away from taking those pills, make an appointment with the GP, it’s not thought through (SH17) |
Data extracts illustrating key themes relating to positive experiences of online help
| Theme | Data extract |
|---|---|
| Dialogue | Everyday [charity] post something and it’s a nice reminder that it’s going on still, so you don’t feel completely alienated and alone all the time… It’s almost like having a friend check up on you every day, the same logic. (SM109) |
| Links to moderated forums | [Site] had a banner saying if you need support now, click here, and then it kind of links you into the forums that you can join in and stuff. (Int: you feel that it was important that there was something immediately there?) Totally, yeah. I think if there hadn’t been, I don’t know what would have happened then. But yeah, no it was important. I mean there was people on-line typing… you could type a paragraph and then somebody would come back with the reply (SM1) When you sign up they came up with the rules of this site, which were very plainly put in a straightforward, talking sort of way. And then they put a little bit about each of the moderators and they’d got their pictures. Also, you could see where they’d intervene… you did feel as if there was a presence, and not an intimidating, policing presence, it would be more a hands on the tiller, if you want me, shout, sort of presence… that was very important, I thought. (SM33) |
| Lived-experience content | I liked that there was a balance between information given by professionals and then patient experience, which kind of humanised it I guess as well (SM35) You want something that makes you go [bangs on the table] that’s it—that’s the way I feel. (Int: And can you say what it was about that site that did that for you?) I read some stories and I didn’t see them as anecdotes. I saw them as a very real and very true… it gave me some courage… and it gives you the option to take onboard they [subjects] are still here and ultimately that’s extremely important because you can recognise yourself in what’s being said (SH17) |
| Self-help tools | The information didn’t change, it’s a static thing, I needed something extra then, something new or different. (Int: Can you recall anything that did feel different or new?) I think it was thinking to look for crisis plans, and I think it would have been better if they were more obviously accessible perhaps, rather than like I only found them because I thought to search for them… having something like that was very instructive… like step-by-step, and that then gave you something you could come back to at other times. (SM35) |