Internet and Psychiatry
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"Internet and Suicide" chapter abstracts

Media suicide-reports, Internet use and the incidence of suicides in Japan

April 26, 2010

Akihito Hagihara, Takeru Abe
Kyushu University Graduate School of Medicine, Fukuoka, Japan
Internet and Suicide. Hauppauge, New York: Nova Science Publishers, 2009, 452 pages.

Although Internet use has greatly increased, its influence on suicide is completely unknown. In addition, previous investigations regarding the effects of suicide reports in the media on suicide incidence in Japan have been limited and inconclusive. Thus, the relationship between newspaper articles about suicide, Internet use, and the incidence of suicide in Japan was examined. A linear model was fitted to time series data from January 1987 to March 2005 (218 months). Consistent with previous findings, the number of newspaper articles about suicide was a predictor of suicide among both male and female subjects. Internet use was also a predictor of suicide among males, probably because males spent more time online than females. Since this is the first, preliminary study examining the association between Internet use and suicide, further research is required to verify the present findings.

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‹ Internet-associated suicide in Japan › For better or for worse? Suicide and the Internet in the World Today

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