Robin
Williams' death linked to rise in copycat suicides
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[February 08, 2018]
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Suicide rates in the
United States spiked almost 10 percent following the
death in 2014 of actor Robin Williams, and spiked even
more among men and those who ended their lives, like
Williams, by suffocation, according to a study published
on Wednesday.
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The study, published in the scientific journal PLOS One, found
that in the five months from August to December 2014 some 18,690
deaths by suicide were recorded - an increase of 9.85 percent
from the expected number of cases for the period.
Williams, the Oscar-winning star of "Good Morning, Vietnam" who
was beloved for his humor, died in August 2014 at age 63 in a
suicide that shocked fans worldwide. Authorities said he died of
asphyxia after hanging himself at his home in northern
California. An autopsy found that Williams was suffering from
Lew body dementia, which causes a progressive decline in mental
ability.
Suicides following Williams' death rose by 12.9 percent in men
aged 30-44, and the study found a 32 percent increase in the
number of deaths from suffocation.
Although the study could not prove a definitive link, it said
there appeared to be a connection. Extensive media coverage of
Williams' death "might have proved the necessary stimulus for
high-risk segments of the U.S. population (e.g. middle-aged men
in despair) to move from suicidal ideation to attempt."
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While the effects of widely reported celebrity suicides have
previously been linked to increases in the wider population, the
study said media coverage of Williams' suicide was particularly
detailed and sensational and was amplified through social media.
The suicide in 1994 of Nirvana lead singer Kurt Cobain, for example,
appeared to have a minimal impact on suicide rates in his Seattle
home town, partly because of more restricted reporting, the study
said.
"The media industry can positively or negatively influence imitation
suicides," the study said. "Popular news media headlines suggest
that media guidelines for suicide reporting were not followed in the
case of Mr. Williams."
The study used data collected by the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention.
(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Leslie Adler)
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