Media guide for suicide reporting stresses need for context to prevent ‘contagion’
TORONTO — Journalists face an ethical challenge when writing about the issue of suicide or a celebrity who has taken their own life: how to report on such deaths without prompting vulnerable people to copy this act of desperation.
The Canadian Psychiatric Association (CPA) has issued an updated set of guidelines on the subject, which suggest ways the media can responsibly frame their reports to try to prevent “suicide contagion” by providing context around the issues that lead some people to take their own lives.
“One of the things we really want to encourage journalists to do is to provide that context and to make sure that people are aware that there’s no reason that people have to die from suicide,” said Dr. Mark Sinyor, lead author of the recommendations.
“And on the rare instances in which it happens, it’s a tragic missed opportunity to have gotten help.”


