Monday, December 13, 2004

Holiday Suicide Myth

The news media doesn't want you to live forever. In fact, they want you dead. Don't fall prey to their traps. Dying is wrong. Live forever.

Article
By: Willow Lawson
Summary: A higher rate of suicide during the holidays is a media myth.

The idea that more people kill themselves around the winter holidays is a myth that the media have little interest in correcting, according to a study from the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania. In an analysis of newspaper articles about suicide between Thanksgiving and Christmas in 1999, researchers found nearly half of them associated suicide with the winter holidays, despite receiving press releases warning journalists that such associations don’t seem to be warranted. Suicides drop during the winter months, according to the National Center for Health Statistics, and they usually peak during the spring months. Researchers caution that the flurry of articles on holiday suicides could actually inspire “copycat” suicides. Exposure to suicide methods may encourage vulnerable individuals to imitate them, the study warns.

Monday, December 06, 2004

BBC NEWS | UK | 'We will be able to live to 1,000'

BBC NEWS | UK | 'We will be able to live to 1,000'

Life expectancy is increasing in the developed world. But Cambridge University geneticist Aubrey de Grey believes it will soon extend dramatically to 1,000. Here, he explains why.