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Journal Article

Citation

Chen W, Boggero A, Del Puente G, Olcese M, Prestia D, Jahrami H, Chalghaf N, Guelmami N, Azaiez F, Bragazzi NL. JMIR Form. Res. 2021; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, JMIR Publications)

DOI

10.2196/29146

PMID

34689118

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Suicide represents a public health concern, imposing a dramatic burden. Pro-suicide websites are "virtual pathways" facilitating the insurgence of suicidal behaviors, especially among socially-isolated, susceptible individuals.

OBJECTIVE: To characterize suicide-related web-pages in the Italian language.

METHODS: The first five most commonly used search engines in Italy (namely, Bing©, Virgilio©, Yahoo©, Google©, and Libero©) were mined, searching for "suicidio" (Italian for suicide). For each search, the first 100 web-pages were considered. Web-sites resulting from each search were collected and duplicates deleted, in such a way that unique web-pages were analyzed and rated, using the HONcode© instrument.

RESULTS: Sixty-four web-pages were included: 12.5% were anti-suicide and 6.3% explicitly pro-suicide. The majority of the included websites had a mixed/neutral attitude towards suicide (81.2%) and had an informative content and purpose (60.9%). Most web-pages targeted adolescents as age-group (59.4%), contained a reference to other psychiatric disorders/co-morbidities (65.6%), were with a medical/professional supervision/guidance (70.3%), without figures/pictures related to suicide (64.1%) and did not contain any access restraint (96.9%). The major shortcoming is the small sample size of web-pages analyzed and the search limited to the keyword "suicide".

CONCLUSIONS: Specialized mental health professionals should try to improve their presence online and providing high-quality material.


Language: en

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