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<b></b> This document outlines Malaysia's development and national launch of the <i>Guidelines for Ethical Reporting and Sharing of Suicide-Related Content</i>, a first-of-its-kind media-lead initiative at the national policy level with a strong lived experience representation in a low- and middle-income setting aimed at improving suicide-related communication across traditional and digital media. Spearheaded by the Communications and Multimedia Content Forum of Malaysia (Content Forum) under the Ministry of Ministry of Communications and in collaboration with the National Centre of Excellence for Mental Health, (NCEMH) under the Ministry of Health, the guidelines were codeveloped through a multistakeholder working group involving media professionals within an environment that showed interest in responsible reporting and sharing of suicide-related content, mental health experts, individuals with lived experience, media environment showed interest in responsible reporting, civil society, and government representatives. This paper highlights the uniqueness of the Malaysian guidelines which included guidance on how to make a statement of death by officials, reporting in multifaith communities and a Malay, national language version. Successful strategies included engaging media as cocreators, embedding lived experience, and maintaining institutional support without losing industry leadership. Ongoing challenges such as limited reach beyond member organizations and the absence of real-time content monitoring were outlined. The paper concludes with practical recommendations for others aiming to develop similar content guidelines in low- and middle-income settings, and reflects on how soft law and self-regulation, when grounded in trust and collaboration, can drive meaningful public health outcomes in the digital age.