ABSTRACT

Suicide is a complex interplay of human behaviours having multifactorial origins. Clinicians and researchers often encounter numerous problems in assimilating the empirical evidences to avert the incidents of suicidal happenings so as to assess, evaluate their efficacy and execute potential practice. Suicidal occurrences have been widely varied across cultures. The present paper scrutinises the compounding factors of cross-cultural suicidal occurrences and offers various preventive measures through digital interventions that may project a considerable improvement in cognitive behaviours of the people deliberately intending to self-harm. The paper also promises an optimal allocation of various cross-cultural suicide deterrent strategies that can be accessed digitally all across the globe.