Whenever a celebrity dies by suicide, the world pays attention, and the suicide prevention community braces for impact. Why? We know that the media will often circulate unsafe messaging for days after the tragedies and that this will have a suicide exposure effect on many people who are already vulnerable to suicide.


Recently, we lost not one but two well-known celebrities to suicide. Immediately, major media outlets went into high gear. Some journalists—unknowingly or intentionally—have been reporting in a way that has been shown in the research to increase suicide risk. Many elements of their reporting—romanticizing, glamorizing, gratuitously detailing the means of death, or depicting the death scene—are considered unsafe reporting practices and have been shown to contribute to an uptick in suicide attempts and deaths in the days and weeks following a celebrity’s suicide. Several other media outlets did an outstanding job reporting these newsworthy events with sensitivity and followed practices that would help people find hope and link to life-saving resources like the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

Decades of research summarized in the Suicide Prevention Resource Center safe messaging reference guide encourage those who are giving public communications about suicide to follow these suggestions.1

  • Portray help-seeking as a reasonable action.
  • Provide resources to choose from.
  • Give people who are willing to help others with something to do.
  • While you may want to communicate the importance of the issue, be careful not to normalize suicide.
  • Emphasize that suicide can be prevented and treated successfully.
  • Help distressed individuals to feel competent that they can do what needs to be done.
  • Avoid giving very specific details of the tragedy.
Say thisInstead of this
Died of suicideCommitted suicide
Suicide deathSuccessful attempt
Suicide attemptUnsuccessful attempt
Person living with suicidal thoughts or behaviorSuicide ideator or attempter
SuicideCompleted suicide
(Describe the behavior)Manipulative, cry for help, or suicidal gesture
Working withDealing with suicidal crisis

The Power of Words

Language matters when discussing issues of suicide; language reflects our attitudes and influences our attitudes and the attitudes of others. Words have power; words matter. The language we choose is an indicator of social injustice and has the power to shape our ideas and feelings in very insidious ways.

Phrases To Describe Suicide

For example, the phrase “committed suicide” is frowned on because it harks back to an era when suicide was considered a sin or a crime. Think about the times when we use the word “commit”: “commit adultery” or “commit murder.” Similarly, “successful suicide” or “unsuccessful attempt” are considered poor choices because they connote an achievement or something positive even though they result in tragic outcomes.

Putting People First

Likewise, using “suicide” as a noun to describe a person (“the suicide was wheeled into the morgue”) is considered dehumanizing and reductionist. When we identify a person solely by his or her mental illness (“He is bipolar.”), we have diminished that individual’s wholeness. We wouldn’t say, “He was a heart attack.” Instead, we need to define a person by his or her life, not the manner of death, and say, “He was a person who died of suicide; he also loved to play golf, brew beer, and climb mountains.” Or: “She is a teacher, writer, and animal lover who lives with a bipolar condition.” So, let’s put people first and focus on their resilience. Instead of “suicide attempter,” we can say “they are a person who has lived through a suicide attempt.”

The litmus test for talking about suicide is to substitute the word “cancer” for the word “suicide” to see if the sentence still makes sense or if it has a negative connotation. We wouldn’t say “committed cancer” or “successful cancer”—we would simply say “cancer death” or “died of cancer.” Thus, when it comes to suicide, we should say “suicide death” or “died of suicide.”

We should also be wary of assuming intent when we use the phrases “cry for help” or “suicide gesture.” This line of thinking can be a slippery slope. Instead of dismissing these suicidal behaviors as not serious, we should lean in and better understand what function they are serving in a person’s life. Perhaps, we can get that need met in another way.

“Suicide Is Selfish”

In his book Myths about Suicide, Dr. Thomas Joiner goes to great lengths to dispute this common narrative of suicide as a selfish act. While it may appear that those who die of suicide are not taking into consideration the impact that their death will have on loved ones, there is much evidence to the contrary. The mind of a suicidal person is distorted and often holds the belief that he or she will be lessening their burden on loved ones by no longer being around. Avoid using this type of storyline.

“It Was His Choice”

The idea of choice or free will is often discouraged when talking about suicide because thinking is often very impaired at the time of death. Sometimes individuals who are in the throes of unimaginable emotional pain are not entirely competent to make a rational decision because their depression, addiction, or other mental health condition often prevents them from generating alternative solutions to their problems? Many people I have interviewed who have survived a very intense suicide crisis report that they have experienced something akin to command hallucinations right before they attempted—voices inside their heads telling them to kill themselves.

At an American Association of Suicidology conference, Donna Schuurman challenged the audience to look up definitions of suicide. So I did. Merriam-Webster2 defines it as “the act or an instance of taking one’s own life voluntarily and intentionally.”

The concept of “choice” is confusing because, while we never have direct access to the inner workings of a mind of someone who has died by suicide, there is much evidence that the thought processes are often gravely disordered by the effects of trauma, mental health conditions, and substance abuse. If a person can’t choose rationally due to impairment of the mind, the decision is not a choice.

The concept of “choice” is especially confusing to those bereaved by suicide. On the one hand, survivors of suicide loss who tried to keep their loved ones alive over time find the notion comforting; even though they did all they could to prolong life, the final “decision” ultimately rested with the suicidal individual. On the other hand, survivors of suicide loss sometimes cannot fathom why their loved ones would choose death over love or the possibility of a better life.

Getting Positive Messages Out There: Hope, Strength, and Healing

A few passionate resilience advocates can only go so far in changing the culture of mental health promotion and suicide prevention; we need workplaces, schools, faith communities, and healthcare systems to help model safe and compassionate language to help challenge the misinformation and myths that exist. We must learn to effectively disseminate our messages to large numbers of people. To do this, we need to craft safe and powerful messages, work collaboratively with traditional media outlets, and strategically use social media.

Crafting Effective Messages about Suicide: Hope Is the Antidote

Suicide prevention is a hard sell. As a result, well-meaning health professionals often make serious errors when crafting messages for suicide prevention. We have a tendency to think that we need to grab the public’s attention through graphic and scary messages when that just tends to turn people off. Instead, we need to think about aligning with our audience’s beliefs, values, priorities, and needs.3 We must craft messages that are positively engaging, provide people with the information we want them to remember, and give them action steps.

Instead of just “raising awareness” by sharing statistics of suicide death, we can inspire hope by sharing stories of recovery and letting them know that help is available. Kevin Hines’s story is one that has been spreading a ripple of hope around the world. Mr. Hines survived a jump off the Golden Gate Bridge, and his BuzzFeed video now has over 100,000 views. His main message—you are not alone, and brain health is possible. He is a fierce advocate for mental wellness and lives his message of fighting for a passion for life every day.

Another positive media campaign, developed by the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline encourages everyone to #BeThe1To to take action to prevent suicide. The campaign is designed to be adapted to many different communities to help them move from awareness to proactive prevention—because no one should die in isolation and despair.

So in conclusion, we must talk about suicide if we are going to get in front of it. But HOW we talk about suicide matters. Unsafe messages and data that leaves us feeling that “suicide is an epidemic” can create harm. Instead, let’s focus on messages and stories that inspire hope and healing, and share resources that help people through their despair.


1 Suicide Prevention Resource Center, “At-a-Glance: Safe Reporting on Suicide,” 2007, accessed on August 1, 2010 from http://www.sprc.org/library/at_a_glance.pdf.

2 Retrieved on November 21, 2017, from https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/suicide.

3 A. Dealy, Using Evaluation Data To Motivate and Persuade, presentation at the Garrett Lee Smith Campus Grantee Meeting, Orlando, Florida, February 4, 2010.


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Article originally published on International Risk Management Institute (IRMI): https://www.irmi.com/articles/expert-commentary/language-matters-committed-suicide

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