Suicidal thoughts spiked after deaths of Robin Williams, Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain, shocking study finds
The suicides of a troubling new report from Columbia University finds.
Columbia researchers developed a computer model that estimated the amount of suicidal ideation and the number of suicides that stemmed from these three celebrity deaths. The model takes into account the number of weekly calls to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline and nationwide suicide data.
Columbia researchers determined there was a thousand-fold increase in the likelihood that a person began to contemplate suicide following Williams’ death at 63.
The profound rise in suicidal ideation led to a spike in calls to the 988 Lifeline. The number of “excess suicides” nearly doubled after Williams died, per the Columbia study, which cited media attention and the public’s connection to the beloved comedian for the uptick.
The Spade and Bourdain deaths — which occurred three days apart in June 2018 — had less of an effect on the public, by about half.
