4.5 Article

News for life: improving the quality of journalistic news reporting to prevent suicides

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION
Volume 73, Issue 1, Pages 73-85

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/joc/jqac039

Keywords

quality in journalism; Werther and Papageno effects; suicide; media guidelines; awareness campaign

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This study examines the effects of news quality on suicide reporting and provides empirical evidence supporting the claim that high-quality news can reduce suicide cases. The findings contribute to global suicide prevention efforts.
Despite much theorizing on the quality of journalism, there is limited actual empirical evidence for the effects of improved news quality on societal outcomes. This study provides such evidence for suicide reporting. News quality especially matters in this domain, as low-quality reporting can elicit copycat suicides (Werther effect). We developed and disseminated a web-based campaign promoting high-quality suicide reporting, targeting newsrooms in Germany. Twenty-two newsrooms participated. A content analysis (N = 4,015 articles) provided supporting evidence for an increase in high-quality reporting (Study 1). Interrupted time series analyses offered tentative evidence for a reduction in actual suicides (Study 2). Acknowledging limitations in terms of causal interpretations, the findings support the claim that high-quality news can save lives. Similar newsroom interventions run elsewhere may contribute to preventing suicides globally. We discuss the implications, including those of a theoretically meaningful discovery related to the suicide-protective effect's underlying mechanism, termed the dampening-the-spikes hypothesis.

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