Rethinking Suicide Surveillance

Author:

Ma-Kellams Christine12,Or Flora3,Baek Ji Hyun4,Kawachi Ichiro3

Affiliation:

1. Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard University

2. Department of Psychology, University of La Verne

3. Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard University

4. Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

Abstract

Google search data have become an increasingly relied-on source of health information with a dual function as both a facilitative and a preventative resource. We tested the power of Google to predict suicide by comparing searches for explicitly suicidal terms with conventional measures of self-reported suicide risk in estimating completed suicides. In addition, we examined the extent to which discrepancies between Google-based and self-report-based estimates of suicide risk and completed suicide were asymmetrical across social-group lines. Relative to traditional self-reported measures of suicide risk, Google search data better estimated completed suicides. Furthermore, misestimation of suicidal risk was asymmetrical for both measures: Greater misestimation was likely in states with higher percentages of racial minorities and lower levels of socioeconomic status. Google search data can inform suicide-prevention efforts at the state level and suicide surveillance aimed at specific demographic groups.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology

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