Netflix show condemned for "romanticising" teenager"s suicide
Mental health groups have criticised a new Netflix drama for its “sensationalised” portrayal of a 17-year-old’s suicide, which they say could encourage young people to take their own lives.
The Samaritans, psychiatrists, and mental health campaigners claim 13 Reasons Why could prompt troubled young people to copy the suicide of its central character, Hannah Baker.
“We have a responsibility to protect children and teenagers,” said Dr Helen Rayner, a psychiatrist specialising in children and adolescent mental health who is also a spokeswoman for the Royal College of Psychiatrists. “Dramatic and detailed portrayals of suicide needlessly put vulnerable young people at risk of copycat behaviour as they see how to carry out harmful or potentially fatal acts.
“Graphic depictions of suicide may only influence a small number of viewers, but the consequences can be tragic.”
Ged Flynn, the chief executive of Papyrus, a charity that seeks to prevent suicide among young people, said parents and young people viewing the series should “be aware that when watching this programme there is a danger that suicide is romanticised and sensationalised”.
The US-set series aimed at young people is based on a novel of the same name by Jay Asher. Selena Gomez, the actor and singer, is among its executive producers. Its 13 episodes depict 13 friends of Hannah listening to a tape she made for each of them explaining the difficulties she faced that prompted her to kill herself.
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