This study explores how Vietnamese social media users responded to a series of suicide-related incidents at Vạn Hạnh Mall in Ho Chi Minh City between March and April 2025. Drawing on six highly engaged Facebook posts published by the mall’s official page and the community news outlet Weibo Việt Nam, the study analyzes public commentary and patterns of digital engagement using reflexive thematic analysis. Four themes were identified: empathy toward mall staff and frontline workers, calls for continued community support of the mall, concern about the social and psychological harm associated with suicides in public spaces, and efforts to discourage further discussion because of fears of suicide contagion and cultural sensitivities surrounding death. Rather than treating Confucianism as a governing ideology, the analysis interprets these themes through Confucian ethics as one cultural framework among several that inform moral language, relational responsibility, and restraint in public discourse. The findings show how compassion, concern for collective well-being, and ethical moderation coexist with tension and stigma in online reactions to tragedy. The study contributes to research on suicide communication and digital compassion by providing rare empirical insight from a Southeast Asian context and by highlighting how culturally embedded moral vocabularies shape public sense-making on social media during periods of collective trauma.
Bich Ngoc Nguyen (Wed,) studied this question.