Insights into the Processes of Suicide Contagion: Narratives from Young People Bereaved by Suicide

Bell, Jo, Stanley, Nicky orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-7644-1625, Mallon, Sharon and Manthorpe Pridmore, Jill (2015) Insights into the Processes of Suicide Contagion: Narratives from Young People Bereaved by Suicide. Sucidology Online, 6 (1). pp. 43-52. ISSN 2078-5488

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Abstract

Death by suicide can have a profound and long lasting impact on the people left behind. Research has
demonstrated that, in comparison to the general population, those bereaved by suicide, particularly young
people, are at increased risk for suicide. However, the process of suicide contagion, as it has now become
widely known, is poorly understood.
This paper examines the phenomenon of suicide contagion amongst young people who have been bereaved by
suicide with data from research into student suicide in the UK (Stanley et al., 2007). It presents two in-depth
case studies which draw upon participants’ narratives of their experiences of suicide and their perceptions of
suicide contagion. One explores the suicide of two close friends in succession and the subsequent belief among
friends that this was contagious. The second explores another young person’s own view of ‘suicide as
contagious’, formed following the suicide of her best friend. Our analysis provides insights into the processes of
suicide contagion and transmission not previously described, including identification, internalisation, and
imitation and also Edwin Shneidman’s assertion that suicide is the result of psychological pain.


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