Steven Stack, Barbara Bowman, Mark Sinyor, Thomas Niederkrotenthaler
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: A majority of research concerning media impacts on suicide has focused on the harmful impacts. In contrast, the present study focuses on positive media impacts, the Papageno effect. The central hypothesis is that the higher the exposure of the public to films portraying a story of a suicidal person who ultimately recovers, the lower the suicide rate. Methodology: Data on suicides per 100,000 were from the US Public Health Service. Seven online film bibliographies were searched to include American films that (1) contained a person initially attempting suicide and then conquering their problems and (2) were in the top 50 at the box office. The number of such portrayals per year comprised the chief independent variable, while adjustments were made for three core theoretical constructs. Results: Sixty-one narratives met the inclusion criteria. An AR-1 Cochrane-Orcutt multivariate analysis showed that controlling for the other predictors, each additional exposure to a Papageno story significantly decreased the suicide rate (b = -.059, SE = .023, t = -2.51, p = .015). The full model explained 89% of the variance. Limitations: Only half a century was assessed. Conclusion: This is the first analysis linking the yearly frequency of Papageno narratives to a lower national suicide rate.
背景:大多数关于媒体对自杀影响的研究都集中在有害影响上。相比之下,本研究侧重于积极的媒体影响,即帕帕杰诺效应。其核心假设是,公众对描绘自杀者最终康复的故事的电影的曝光率越高,自杀率就越低。方法:每10万人中自杀的数据来自美国公共卫生服务。研究人员搜索了7部在线电影书目,其中包括(1)包含一个人最初试图自杀,然后克服了他们的问题;(2)票房排名前50位的美国电影。每年这种描绘的数量构成了主要的自变量,同时对三个核心理论结构进行了调整。结果:61篇叙事符合纳入标准。一项AR-1 Cochrane-Orcutt多变量分析显示,在控制其他预测因素后,每多听一次Papageno故事,自杀率就会显著降低(b = -)。059, SE = 0.023, t = -2.51, p = 0.015)。完整的模型解释了89%的方差。局限性:仅评估了半个世纪。结论:这是第一个将Papageno叙事的年度频率与较低的全国自杀率联系起来的分析。
期刊介绍:
A must for all who need to keep up on the latest findings from both basic research and practical experience in the fields of suicide prevention and crisis intervention! This well-established periodical’s reputation for publishing important articles on suicidology and crisis intervention from around the world is being further enhanced with the move to 6 issues per year (previously 4) in 2010. But over and above its scientific reputation, Crisis also publishes potentially life-saving information for all those involved in crisis intervention and suicide prevention, making it important reading for clinicians, counselors, hotlines, and crisis intervention centers.