BRIDGEND, Wales, Jan. 28, 2008

Web Link Among Young Suicide Victims?

Some Of 13 In British Town May Have Posted Messages, Shared Friends On Networking Sites

  • Video What Are 'Cluster' Suicides?

    Clinical Psychologist Jeff Gardere explains to Julie Chen how young people can be susceptible to suicide, especially when linked by the Internet or other factors.

  • Bridgend, Wales has seen 13 young people take their own lives in recent months.

    Bridgend, Wales has seen 13 young people take their own lives in recent months.  (CBS/EARLY SHOW)

(CBS)  Police in a small British town are investigating a series of suicides of young people, and whether the Internet was some sort of common communications denominator in any of the deaths.

What's certain is that something tragic and mysterious is going on in Bridgend, Wales, reports CBS News correspondent Mark, Phillips.

For reasons that are baffling experts, Bridgend has become the center of the apparent cluster of suicides among young people.

First, says Phillips, there were seven victims, all aged between 17 and 27. All hanged themselves over the past year. Each knew at least one other person in the group.

Now, the town's coroner has revealed another six recent suicides, bringing the total to thirteen.

There was almost a 14th victim, but her parents found her hanging, barely alive, and were able to save her.

But they say she can't remember trying suicide, or why she did.

The Internet, Phillips observes, particularly tribute sites on which people place eulogies to the dead, has emerged as a suspect in these cases. Some of the victims posted messages before killing themselves. The link isn't clear, but it worries experts.

And, according to London's "Sunday Times," at least three of the victims "all shared friends on Bebo," a popular social networking Web site in the United Kingdom.

Madeleine Moon, a local member of Parliament, says, "What's alarming (is) ... there are chat rooms (not just on Bebo) that people go into to talk about suicide and to contemplate suicide."

Still, authorities in Wales say there's no clear connection among the cases.

Schools and parents in Bridgend have been put on suicide watch. Counseling is being offered.

But, notes Phillips, nobody is exactly sure what causes or signs they're looking for.

On The Early Show Monday, clinical psychologist Jeff Gardere told co-anchor Julie Chen, "We've seen this before. It's called suicide contagion or suicide clusters. ... What they share in common is that these are young people who are actually vulnerable to suicide. They all come from the same geographical area, though we know there are no boundaries because of the Internet. And the media, but most importantly, what we've seen in this particular case, many of these kids have died by hanging. So, they do know one another or know of one another, and they do communicate on these sites.

Continued



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