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Social Media and Suicide: Empirical Evidence From the Quasi-Exogenous Geographical Adoption of Twitter

Journal Article
Social media usage is often cited as a potential driver behind the rising suicide rates. However, distinguishing the causal effect—whether social media increases the risk of suicide—from reverse causality, where individuals already at higher risk of suicide are more likely to use social media, remains a significant challenge. In this paper, the authors use an instrumental variable approach to study the quasi-exogenous geographical adoption of Twitter and its causal relationship with suicide rates. Their analysis first demonstrates that Twitter's geographical adoption was driven by the presence of certain users at the 2007 South by Southwest (SXSW) festival, which led to long-term disparities in adoption rates across counties in the United States. Then, using a two-stage least squares regression and controlling for a wide range of geographic, socioeconomic, and demographic factors, they find no significant relationship between Twitter adoption and suicide rates.
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