Perhaps this stands out to other suicide loss survivors as well. One sees a story about the death of a young person who has died, usually someone well-known in the public arena. They’ll refrain from using the word suicide or “took their own life” but will hint around the edges with, “had struggled with mental health issues for years.”
That doesn’t seem to be the best way to go in regards to openly discussing and addressing suicide here or abroad. Call the death what it was and face it head on.
I do however, agree with the policy of not giving the details on how someone took their life. That only plays on morbid curiosity, like slowing down to look over a fatal car crash.
What would be most helpful, in my humble opinion, is more stories about someone who almost ended their life, and what they did and are continuing to do to be here, caring for themselves and getting the needed support from others. Great example would be Kevin Hines in his activism and book, Cracked, Not Broken.