
Googling for Suicide–Content and Quality Analysis of Suicide-Related Websites: Thematic Analysis
Author(s) -
Wen Chen,
Andrea Boggero,
Giovanni Del Puente,
Martina Olcese,
Davide Prestía,
Haitham Jahrami,
Nasr Chalghaf,
Noomen Guelmami,
Faïrouz Azaiez,
Nicola Luigi Bragazzi
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
jmir formative research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2561-326X
DOI - 10.2196/29146
Subject(s) - thematic analysis , web page , quality (philosophy) , suicide prevention , content analysis , thematic map , psychology , medicine , poison control , world wide web , computer science , medical emergency , qualitative research , geography , sociology , social science , philosophy , cartography , epistemology
Background Suicide represents a public health concern, imposing a dramatic burden. Prosuicide websites are “virtual pathways” facilitating a rise in suicidal behaviors, especially among socially isolated, susceptible individuals. Objective The aim of this study is to characterize suicide-related webpages in the Italian language. Methods The first 5 most commonly used search engines in Italy (ie, Bing, Virgilio, Yahoo, Google, and Libero) were mined using the term “suicidio” (Italian for suicide). For each search, the first 100 webpages were considered. Websites resulting from each search were collected and duplicates deleted so that unique webpages could be analyzed and rated with the HONcode instrument Results A total of 65 webpages were included: 12.5% (8/64) were antisuicide and 6.3% (4/64) explicitly prosuicide. The majority of the included websites had a mixed or neutral attitude toward suicide (52/64, 81.2%) and had informative content and purpose (39/64, 60.9%). Most webpages targeted adolescents as an age group (38/64, 59.4%), contained a reference to other psychiatric disorders or comorbidities (42/64, 65.6%), included medical/professional supervision or guidance (45/64, 70.3%), lacked figures or pictures related to suicide (41/64, 64.1%), and did not contain any access restraint (62/64, 96.9%). The major shortcoming to this study is the small sample size of webpages analyzed and the search limited to the keyword “suicide.” Conclusions Specialized mental health professionals should try to improve their presence online by providing high-quality material.