The song,
whose title is the phone number for the U.S. National Suicide Prevention
Lifeline, resulted in a significant increase in the number of calls to the
hotline and an estimated reduction in deaths by suicide after its initial
release in 2017, according to a study published in The BMJ.
Entitled “Association
of Logic’s hip hop song '1-800-273-8255' with Lifeline calls and suicides in
the United States: interrupted time series analysis,” the study found that
the song “was associated with a large increase in calls” to the lifeline number
and that a reduction in the number of deaths by suicide “was observed in the
periods with the most social media discourse about the song.”
The study
examined a variety of data including Twitter posts and found the song received
the most amount of publicity after the video’s initial release and at the MTV
Video Music Awards both in August 2017, and again on January 2018, following
the 2018 Grammy Awards. In the 34-day periods following each event, Lifeline
received 9,915 (or 6.9 percent) more calls than during similar periods in
previous years. The study also found a decrease of 245 deaths by suicide
nationwide over the same 34-day periods when compared to the same time periods
in the past.
While
researchers admit other factors may have influenced the increase in calls and
reduction in deaths by suicide, the study’s lead researcher notes the
significance of the rap genre in their findings.
“Rap music is
one of the most popular music genres in the United States and therefore more
likely to reach groups that are not interested in typical sorts of prevention
messaging,” Thomas Niederkrotenthaler, Ph.D., MMSc, associate professor at the
Suicide Research Unit at the Medical University of Vienna, explained to Psych Central.
“Music can be
a beneficial outlet for youth across communities who are struggling with their
mental health as it provides them with an opportunity to process overwhelming
emotions as well as communicate how they’re feeling through safe and creative
expression,” Doreen Marshall, Ph.D., vice president of mission engagement at
the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, told Psych Central.
A recent study
from The Trevor Project, the support group for LGBTQ+ youth at risk of death by
suicide, found LGBTQ+ youth are four times more likely to attempt death
by suicide than their straight peers. Carl Nassib of the NFL’s Las Vegas Raiders football team
donated $100,000 to The Trevor Project when he famously came out in
June of last year. The NFL quickly matched his donation.
The 2017 music video featured Nickelodeon’s Coy
Stewart as the outed gay youth, Nolan Gould as his boyfriend, Matthew Modine as
Gould’s father, and Don Cheadle as Stewart’s dad. The video concludes showing
Stewart calling the Lifeline number.
The
recent BMJ study described the song as likely “the broadest
and most sustained suicide prevention messaging directly connected to a story
of hope and recovery in any location to date” and can be used as a guide for
future collaborations on matters of public concern like death by suicide.
“The Logic
song experience shows that creative collaborations with the entertainment
industry and creative arts are highly warranted, but these projects need to
reflect the diversity of various target groups,” said Niederkrotenthaler.
SOURCE: OUT DOT COM
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