Safety
Risks for 'Goth' Youths?
Self-Harm and Attempted
Suicide are More Common in Members of 'Goth' Subculture
By Miranda Hitti
WebMD Medical News
Reviewed By Ann Edmundson, MD
on Friday, April 14, 2006
New research shows that self-harm and attempted suicide may be
more common among youths who strongly identify with the "Goth" subculture.
"'Goth' could be described as a subgenre of punk with a dark
and sinister aesthetic, with aficionados conspicuous by their range of
distinctive clothing and makeup and tastes in music," the researchers write in
BMJ Online First.
The study was done in western Scotland. It included 1,258
teens who were 19 years old. Participants had joined a larger survey of health
and lifestyles in 1994, when they were 11 years old. They took follow-up surveys
at ages 13, 15, and 19.
At age 19, participants were asked if they had ever tried to
kill or deliberately hurt themselves. They were also asked if they identified
(past and present) with 15 different subcultures, including Goth, punk, skater,
hip hop, and pop subcultures.
Study's Results
The vast majority of participants said they didn't identify at
all with the Goth subculture.
However, 15 youths said they were Goths or "heavily"
identified with the Goth subculture. Eight of those participants (53%) reported
ever deliberately trying to harm themselves and almost as many reported ever
attempting suicide (47%).
Adjusting for other factors -- including social class,
parents' marital status, smoking, drug use (not counting alcohol), and past
depression -- didn't change the results.
Self-harm involved cutting, scratching, or scoring the skin.
The 15 students who heavily identified with the Goth subculture or called
themselves Goths were more likely to report ever harming themselves than their
peers who were heavily into the other subcultures, such as punk, which were also
associated with self-harm.
Researchers' Comments
With relatively few participants who strongly identified with
the Goth subculture, the researchers aren't jumping to any conclusions.
Self-harm and suicide attempts certainly aren't limited to any particular group
of youths, and stereotyping never helps.
Robert Young, a University of Glasgow research scientist who
worked on the study, commented on the findings in a news release.
"Although only fairly small numbers of young people identify
as belonging to the Goth subculture, rates of self-harm and attempted suicide
are very high among this group," Young says.
"One common suggestion is they may be copying subcultural
icons or peers. But since our study found that more reported self-harm before,
rather than after, becoming a Goth, this suggests that young people with a
tendency to self-harm are attracted to the Goth subculture," he continues.
"Rather than posing a risk, it's also possible that by
belonging to this subculture, young people are gaining valuable social and
emotional support from their peers. However, the study was based on small
numbers and replication is needed to confirm our results," Young says.
SOURCES: Young, R. BMJ
Online First, April 14, 2006. News release, BMJ.
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