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KMID : 0613620160360030158
Health Social Welfare Review
2016 Volume.36 No. 3 p.158 ~ p.178
An Exploratory Study for Establishing More Realistic Media Guidelines for Reporting on Suicides
Yu Hyun-Jae

Abstract
This exploratory study attempted to develop more practical and realistic guidelines for media reports on suicides in Korea, which as of 2015 had the highest suicide rate among OECD countries for 13 consecutive years. An online survey was conducted in which 634 Korean citizens participated. This survey inquired as to the degree to which the respondents believed each specific item exposed in media reports covering suicides (e.g., ¡°providing information on the method used to commit suicide,¡±¡°reporting on a celebrity suicide¡±) encouraged people to have positive or less negative perceptions of suicide. The specific items used in the survey were collected from several media guidelines used in 16 different countries as provided through the IASP (International Association for Suicide Prevention) website. The participants were presented with 43 different items (issues) and asked whether these items would lead people to have positive or negative perceptions of suicide. The author was able to identify some items that were considered by the 634 Korean participants to be more important than others with regard to preventing suicide. Participants were asked to disclose few personal details. Information such as the level of depression they were experiencing at that time could be considered important variables in studies regarding suicide. Based upon the results, this exploratory study suggested more practical and (or) realistic guidelines for the media professionals to use when covering suicides in Korea, a society that has experienced a serious suicide rate for many years.
KEYWORD
High Suicide Rate, Media Guidelines, Copycat Effect
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