Mental Health
Association between pro-suicide website searches through Google and suicide death in the United States from 2010-2021. Nora Kelsall* Nora Kelsall Catherine Gimbrone Mark Olfson Madelyn S. Gould Jeffrey Shaman Katherine M. Keyes
The rate of suicide death has been increasing, making understanding risk factors of growing importance. While exposure to explicit suicide-related media is known to increase population suicide rates, it is not known whether pro-suicide website forums, which often promote or facilitate information about fatal suicide means, are related to change in suicide deaths overall or by specific means. The present study aimed to estimate the association of the frequency of Google searches of known pro-suicide web forums and content with death by suicide over time in the US. National monthly Google search data for names of common pro-suicide websites between January 2010 and December 2021 were extracted from Google Health Trends API. Suicide deaths were identified using the CDC National Vital Statistics System (NVSS), and three primary means of death were identified (poisoning, suffocation, and firearm). Distributed lag non-linear models (DLNMs) were then used to estimate the lagged association between the number of Google searches on suicide mortality, stratified by age, sex, and means. Months in the US in which search rates for pro-suicide websites increased had more documented deaths by intentional poisoning and suffocation, among both adolescents and adults. For example, the risk of poisoning suicide among youth and young adults (age 10-24) was 1.79 (95% CI 1.06, 3.03) times higher in months with 22 searches per 10 million as compared to 0 searches. We also observed that increased search rates were associated with fewer youth suicide deaths by firearm with a three-month time lag for adolescents. Although more analysis is needed, findings suggest an association between increased pro-suicide website searches and increased suicide deaths, specifically deaths by poisoning and suffocation, emphasizing the need to further investigate sites containing potentially dangerous information and their associations with deaths by suicide, as they may affect vulnerable individuals.