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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Formative Research

Date Submitted: Mar 28, 2021
Date Accepted: Oct 1, 2021
Date Submitted to PubMed: Oct 24, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Googling for Suicide–Content and Quality Analysis of Suicide-Related Websites: Thematic Analysis

Chen W, Boggero A, del Puente G, Olcese M, Prestia D, Jahrami H, Chalghaf N, Guelmami N, Azaiez F, Bragazzi NL

Googling for Suicide–Content and Quality Analysis of Suicide-Related Websites: Thematic Analysis

JMIR Form Res 2021;5(11):e29146

DOI: 10.2196/29146

PMID: 34689118

PMCID: 8663606

Googling for suicide: a content and quality analysis of suicide-related websites

  • Wen Chen; 
  • Andrea Boggero; 
  • Giovanni del Puente; 
  • Martina Olcese; 
  • Davide Prestia; 
  • Haitham Jahrami; 
  • Nasr Chalghaf; 
  • Noomen Guelmami; 
  • Fairouz Azaiez; 
  • Nicola Luigi Bragazzi

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-five 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%).

Conclusions:

The major shortcoming is the small sample size of web-pages analyzed and the search limited to the keyword “suicide”. Specialized mental health professionals should try to improve their presence online and providing high-quality material.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Chen W, Boggero A, del Puente G, Olcese M, Prestia D, Jahrami H, Chalghaf N, Guelmami N, Azaiez F, Bragazzi NL

Googling for Suicide–Content and Quality Analysis of Suicide-Related Websites: Thematic Analysis

JMIR Form Res 2021;5(11):e29146

DOI: 10.2196/29146

PMID: 34689118

PMCID: 8663606

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