Self-Harm Videos Could Actually Help
LatestA new study has found that YouTube videos depicting cutting and other forms of self-harm are disturbingly popular. But they may actually be helping sufferers, rather than encouraging their behavior.
According to ABC, Canadian researchers have found that the top 100 self-harm videos on YouTube have been viewed over 2 million times and favorited over 12,000 times. As of December 2009, when the study was conducted, 90% of these videos included stills of self-inflicted injuries, and 28% included actual footage of people harming themselves. The popularity of these videos, as well as prevalence of the behavior among young people (according to the researchers, 15-30% of high school students in 17-40% of college students self-harm), are certainly disturbing — but researchers say the videos could actually be helpful rather than harmful. Says study author Stephen Lewis, “We found that very few videos actually encourage self-injury. Most were neutral or hopeful for overcoming this issue.” And, writes ABC’s Courtney Hutchison,