JMIR Ment Health. 2026 Apr 28;13:e81213. doi: 10.2196/81213.
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Suicide helplines increasingly employ chat services to aid those in urgent need, but the wording and structure of text-driven exchanges may affect their effectiveness.
OBJECTIVE: Given the association of cognitive distortions with depression and anxiety, this study investigated their prevalence in the language of individuals seeking help from the Dutch 113 suicide helpline.
METHODS: We observed the prevalence of cognitive distortions for both help seekers and counselors in a large volume of chat sessions (N=71,148) of the Dutch 113 suicide chat helpline using natural language processing. The results were compared to 2 large collections of online text data from Dutch social media and web content.
RESULTS: We found that nearly all types of cognitive distortions are more prevalent in the language of help seekers compared to the control group of helpline counselors. Distortions of the personalizing, emotional reasoning, and mental filtering types were, respectively, 20.22, 7.87, and 4.53 times more prevalent among help seekers, revealing a distinct pattern of thought and language among individuals affected by suicidality.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results raise the prospect of improving the effectiveness of online therapeutic interventions that target cognitive distortions through lexical analysis that detects the cognitive and lexical markers of suicidality.
PMID:42048667 | DOI:10.2196/81213