PMID: 9448527Feb 4, 1998Paper

Death rates of characters in soap operas on British television: is a government health warning required?

BMJ : British Medical Journal
T CrayfordS Evans

Abstract

To measure mortality among characters in British soap operas on television. Cohort analysis of deaths in EastEnders and Coronation Street, supplemented by an analysis of deaths in Brookside and Emmerdale. Standardised mortality ratios and the proportional mortality ratio for deaths attributable to external causes (E code of ICD-9 (international classification of diseases, ninth revision). Staying alive in a television soap opera is not easy. Standardised mortality ratios for characters were among the highest for any occupation yet described (771 (95% confidence interval 415 to 1127) for characters in EastEnders), and this was not just because all causes of death were overrepresented. Deaths in soap operas were almost three times more likely to be from violent causes than would be expected from a character's age and sex. A character in EastEnders was twice as likely as a similar character in Coronation Street to die during an episode. The most dangerous job in the United Kingdom is not, as expected, bomb disposal expert, steeplejack, or Formula One racing driver but having a role in one of the United Kingdom's most well known soap operas. This is the first quantitative estimate of the size of the pinch of salt which should be ta...Continue Reading

Citations

Jul 24, 1998·BMJ : British Medical Journal·S Clement
Dec 24, 2005·BMJ : British Medical Journal·David CasarettDavid A Asch
Sep 18, 2007·Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health·Mark A BellisJohn R Ashton
Mar 26, 2014·Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine·J BrownJ H M Crichton
Sep 25, 2002·International Journal of Palliative Nursing·G McPhail

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