Suicidal Behavior in Nepali motion pictures of three decades (1990–2020): A content analysis

Background Assessment of the depiction of suicidal behavior in motion pictures would reveal the social representation of suicide that would foster suicide prevention in a country. Objectives We aimed to assess how suicidality has been depicted in Nepali movies by scrutinizing their contents against...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inBrain and behavior Vol. 14; no. 1; pp. e3366 - n/a
Main Authors Singh, Rakesh, Mahato, Sharika, Singh, Kritika, Puri, Niranjan Raman, Baniya, Susma, Arafat, SM Yasir
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.01.2024
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Wiley
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Background Assessment of the depiction of suicidal behavior in motion pictures would reveal the social representation of suicide that would foster suicide prevention in a country. Objectives We aimed to assess how suicidality has been depicted in Nepali movies by scrutinizing their contents against the sociodemographic checklist and WHO media guidelines for suicidal reporting. Methods This is a narrative quantitative analysis of suicidal behavior portrayals in the Nepali motion pictures that are publicly and freely accessible. Results Overall, out of the 573 scrutinized movies, we found ten movies consisting of 11 characters (i.e., the prevalence is 1.75%) showing suicidal behavior. The majority of suicidal behavior was seen in males 6 (54.5%), and the majority of attempters were students 3 (27.3%) or homemakers 2 (18.2%). Suicidal behavior was mostly observed in unmarried people 6 (54.5%). Hanging was the most prevalent method (45.5%), and home (36.4%) and public places (36.4%) were equally the most frequent places of attempt. The consequential risk factors for the attempts were found to be marital problems/premarital affairs (50%), followed by unfulfilled demand/conflict (30%). While all 11 items depicted the method and place of the attempt, two also depicted the complete scene of the attempt. One item used language that normalized suicide as a constructive solution to the problem. None of the pictures publicized any mental health messages or educated the public about suicide prevention. Conclusions The minimal adherence of the Nepali motion pictures on the depictions of suicidality with WHO media guidelines indicates urgent need to create awareness among the Nepali film fraternity. This study assessed how suicidality has been depicted in Nepali movies (released between 1990‐2020) by scrutinizing their contents against the sociodemographic checklist and WHO media guidelines for suicidal reporting. Out of the scrutinized 573 movies, we found 10 movies, consisting of 11 characters showing suicidal behavior; while all 11 items mentioned the method and location of suicide, one used language which normalized suicide as a constructive solution to the problem. None of the pictures publicized any mental health messages or educated the public about suicide prevention. The minimal adherence to suicidal depiction indicated the urgent need to create awareness among the Nepali film fraternity.
Bibliography:Rakesh Singh and Sharika Mahato equally contributed.
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:2162-3279
2162-3279
DOI:10.1002/brb3.3366