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Confidential Death to Prevent Suicidal Contagion: An Accepted, but Never Implemented, Nineteenth‐Century Idea
Author(s) -
Leonard Edward C.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
suicide and life‐threatening behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.544
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1943-278X
pISSN - 0363-0234
DOI - 10.1521/suli.31.4.460.22043
Subject(s) - publicity , newspaper , confidentiality , psychology , documentation , copycat , power (physics) , criminology , action (physics) , psychiatry , medicine , law , political science , physics , quantum mechanics , computer science , cognitive science , programming language
Nineteenth‐century medical literature often admonished the popular press to limit reports of suicide, because of a belief that knowledge of another's suicide could stimulate some persons to kill themselves. An 1837 case report (perhaps the earliest attempt at a psychological autopsy in an American medical journal) is discussed, because it presciently clarifies the concept of psychological sensitization. Its study leads to documentation of two examples of falsified death certificates. The power to prevent publicity of suicide by not reporting it may have diminished efforts for newspaper restraint, as did editorial resistance and later acceptance of Emile Durkheim's (1897/1951) strongly expressed belief that reports of suicide did not cause an overall increase in suicide. Despite lack of success over the past two centuries, efforts to keep reports of self‐inflicted death confidential continue to flow from concern about suicidal contagion. Today, uncensored websites and books advocating suicide may limit the benefit of the U. S. Surgeon General's “call to action” to prevent suicide, which again supports voluntary media restraint in reporting suicide.