Research Links Celebrity Deaths to Suicide Spike, Eyes Prevention

Columbia University's Mailman School of Public Health

New research models the rapid and expansive spread of suicidal behaviors following the suicides of Robin Williams in 2014, and of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain, which occurred three days apart in 2018.

Columbia University researchers developed a computer model to examine the dynamics underlying suicide contagion. They found that both the 2014 and 2018 events led to large increases in suicidal thought and behavior. The findings, which appear in the journal Science Advances, provide a framework for quantifying suicidal contagion to better understand, prevent, and contain its spread.

"The model we developed shows how suicide contagion, including both suicidal ideation and deaths, spreads quickly following the suicide deaths of celebrities whose lives and work are known and likely meaningful to large portions of the population," says Jeffrey Shaman, PhD, study co-author, interim dean of Columbia Climate School, and professor of environmental health sciences at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health.

Shaman is well-known for developing models of influenza and SARS-CoV-2. The Columbia researchers' model for suicide contagion has a structure similar to models depicting other infectious systems including the number of individuals capable of transmitting the contagion and the number of individuals susceptible to "infection."

There is no single factor that causes suicide or suicidal ideation. However, a portion of suicidal ideation has long been attributed to social, or contagious, processes. Proximity to or familiarity with persons who have ideated, attempted, or died of suicide can induce suicidal ideation or attempts among susceptible individuals. According to the CDC, suicide rates increased 37 percent between 2000-2018 and decreased 5 percent between 2018-2020 before returning to their peak in 2021.

The Columbia suicide contagion model uses two data sources. First, total weekly calls to the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, currently known as the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (988 Lifeline) was used as an estimate of suicidal ideation (988 Lifeline is a network of more than 200 round-the-clock crisis call centers that provide confidential mental health crisis and counseling services nationwide). The second source was derived from mortality data in the National Vital Statistics System, managed by the National Center for Health Statistics.

The model estimates that following the 2014 suicide event there was a pronounced increase in suicide contagion rates, including a thousand-fold increase of the likelihood that a person would begin to ideate suicide following news of Williams' death by suicide. The result was a pronounced increase of suicidal ideation, manifested in a spike in call volume to 988 Lifeline. The 2018 case is similar, although the magnitude of the suicide contagion rate changes following news of the Spade and Bourdain suicides was roughly half. Among the two celebrity suicide events, the number of excess suicide deaths was approximately double following the 2014 Williams event, potentially reflecting differences in communication and media attention following each event and the level of population connection with the deceased. In both the 2014 and 2018 simulations, the increased rates of contagion lasted about two weeks before returning to baseline levels.

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