BMJ No 7123 Volume 315 Paper Saturday 20/27 December Christmas 1997 issue
Death rates of characters in soap operas on British television:
is a government health warning required?
Tim Crayford, Richard Hooper, Sarah
Evans
Abstract
Objective: To measure mortality among characters in
British soap operas on television.
Design: Cohort analysis of deaths in
EastEnders and Coronation Street,
supplemented by an analysis of deaths in Brookside and
Emmerdale.
Main outcome measures: 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).
Results: 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 to1127) 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.
Conclusions: 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 taken when
watching soap operas. Introduction
Death is a fact of life in soap opera. It is only natural that
producers should exaggerate the danger of real life to make series
interesting, but by how much do they do this? What sorts of occupations
would be as dangerous as being a character in a soap opera? Could
Brookside Close be the most dangerous street in Britain? We set out to
answer these questions in a hard hitting analysis of mortality in
British television soap operas.
British soap opera has been a mirror to many contemporary social themes
over the past 15 years, dealing with topics ranging from HIV and breast
cancer to theft, mugging, and murder. This fact and the huge audiences
that each programme draws each week has helped make soap opera one of
the many ways by which people now normalise their own lives. In this
respect, soap operas presumably contribute to people's knowledge of
death as they have already done for subjects such as mental
illness.(1)
Could it be, however, that these mirrors of our daily lives do not
quite reflect reality when dealing with death? Or are deaths in soap
operas just convenient ways to raise audience figures while distorting
the perception and possibly fear of violence in society? Methods
We studied mortality in four British soap operas on
television - Coronation Street,
EastEnders, Brookside, and
Emmerdale - from 1985, when the newest of the four,
EastEnders, was first broadcast, to the middle of 1997.
A literature review using Medline found little other literature
specifically on mortality in soap opera.(2) We next sought
data from the producers on the dates of deaths or losses to follow up
of all named characters, together with their ages and the dates of
their first appearances, but we were successful only in the case of
Coronation Street. Information obtained from a variety
of internet sites was of sufficient quality to enable a suitable cohort
dataset to be compiled for EastEnders. For
Brookside and Emmerdale we were able to
produce only a list of deaths. Causes of death were divided into
external (E code) and other causes, using codes of ICD-9 (international
classification of diseases, ninth revision). External causes included
car accidents, murders, drug overdoses, suicides, and an aeroplane
crash. For comparative data we used the Office for National
Statistic's CD ROM of 20th century mortality, which lists age and
cause specific death rates for the United Kingdom from 1900 to
1995.(3) We assumed that these rates were the same in 1996
and 1997 as in 1995.
Analysis of data Survival in Coronation Street and
EastEnders was analysed using Kaplan-Meier survival
curves and Cox regression, with age as a time dependent covariate. We
calculated the proportional mortality fraction for deaths from external
causes for all four soap operas. This is defined as the proportion of
all deaths that are attributable to a particular cause. It was compared
with the proportion of deaths from external causes which would be
expected in the population of the United Kingdom at precisely the ages
and dates observed, which gives the proportional mortality
ratio.(4) The likelihood of a given death having an external
cause was compared across soap operas using logistic regression to
adjust for age at death and for
sex. |
|
 | EastEnders: Arthur Fowler is mourned by his wife and sons
| Results
Survival analysis There was some indication of a difference in survival for
characters in EastEnders and Coronation
Street (P<0.10). Over a short interval of time, such as the
duration of an episode, a character in EastEnders was
nearly twice as likely to die as was a similar character in
Coronation Street (hazard ratio 1.9 (0.9 to 3.9)). The
figure shows the survival curves for the two soap operas, with
subjects divided into three groups according to the age at which they
were introduced. Table 1 shows the five year survival rates obtained
from these curves. People suffering from many forms of cancer and other
serious diseases have better five year survival rates than these
characters seem to have.
There was no difference in survival at five years between the soap
operas in characters under 29 years old. The figure also shows that
people moving to Coronation Street between the ages of 30 and 44 went
on to lead charmed lives, while their peers living in Albert Square
dropped like flies. The survival analysis assumes that people who are
written out of the serials without having to die - because their
characters have become dull or dreary to the audience - are not at an
increased risk of death relative to people who stay. In fact, many
disappearances from the square or the street may have been precipitated
by an increased risk (witness the recent departure of the Jackson
family from EastEnders because of threats to their
lives), and this would tend to mean that our estimates of survival were
conservative. Standardised mortality ratios The expected total numbers of deaths on Coronation
Street and EastEnders were calculated from
population data from England and Wales using the number of person years
of follow up at each age and in each calendar year. The standardised
mortality ratio for Coronation Street was 353 (168 to
538), and for EastEnders was 771 (415 to 1127). |
|
 | | Kaplan-Meier survival curves for characters in Coronation
Street and EastEnders in three age groups. Lines
for general population show survival of cohort from population of
United Kingdom who were followed up from 1985, when they were aged 20,
35, and 50 respectively(3). |
| Table 1 - Five year survival rates in percentages (with SEs) of
characters in two British soap operas according to age at first
introduction and in comparison with general population |
| Age (years) |
Coronation Street |
EastEnders |
General population* |
| 0-29 |
90
(5.4) |
91
(4.0) |
99.7 |
| 30-44 |
100 |
79
(8.6) |
99.5 |
| 45 and over |
86
(4.6) |
73
(12.1) |
97.3 |
| *Survival in 1990 of people aged 20, 35, and 50 in 1985.(3) |
These
figures are higher even than the highest stable estimates of
occupational mortality from the Office for National Statistics for
1980.(5) The most dangerous occupations in the United
Kingdom at that time had standardised mortality ratios of only 308
(foremen in the printing in industry) or 413 (foremen in metal furnace
industries). Actors had a standardised mortality ratio of only 99.
For more detailed data, we obtained figures on excess mortality from
the insurance industry (Munich Reinsurance Company's occupational
rating guide, 1996). We estimated the standardised mortality ratio that
would arise if, instead of becoming characters in one of the soap
operas, the people studied had chosen some other hazardous profession.
Table 2 shows the results in decreasing order of foolhardiness. Being
an EastEnders character headed the list, beating Formula
One motor racing to the top spot. Life on Coronation
Street was still more risky than being a bomb disposal expert
or a steeplejack.
| Table 2 - Standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) for various high
risk groups in comparison with general population |
|
SMR |
| EastEnders characters |
771 |
| Formula One drivers |
581 |
| Coronation Street characters |
353 |
| Oil rig divers |
235 |
| Bomb disposal experts |
196 |
| Steeplejacks |
148 |
| General population |
100 |
In total, there were 17 deaths in EastEnders compared
with 26 in Brookside and 28 in Emmerdale.
Although we did not have data on the denominator population for
Brookside and Emmerdale, these data
suggest that these soap operas would have had even higher standardised
mortality ratios than EastEnders or Coronation
Street. Brookside Close and Emmerdale could well be the most
dangerous streets in the United Kingdom.
Proportional mortality ratios Table 3 shows the proportional mortality ratio for deaths from
external causes in each of the four soap operas. Logistic regression
analysis found no differences between them in the number of deaths from
external causes after adjustment for age at death and for sex. Because
of the comparatively young ages at which subjects tended to die, the
expected proportions of deaths with external causes were high.
Nevertheless, in each soap opera there were at least 2.5 times the
expected numbers of deaths from external causes, and the proportional
mortality ratio for all soap operas combined was 2.7 (2.3 to 3.1)
(table 3). Note that in the United Kingdom deaths coded E account for
only 3.2% of all deaths because most deaths occur among elderly people
and external causes of death are rare in this group of
people.(3) But overall in the soap operas they accounted for
64% of all deaths, partly because of the younger age of the characters
and partly because the sets are more violent places to
live.
| Table 3 - Total numbers of deaths and numbers of deaths from external
causes in four British soap operas |
| Soap opera |
Total No of deaths |
No of deaths from external causes |
PMF (%) |
Expected PMF in age matched population(%) |
PMR (95% CI) |
| Coronation Street |
14 |
6 |
43 |
17 |
2.5
(1.4 to 4.6) |
| EastEnders |
17 |
11 |
65 |
22 |
3.0
(2.1 to 4.1) |
| Brookside |
26 |
20 |
77 |
28 |
2.7
(2.2 to 3.3) |
| Emmerdale |
28 |
17 |
61 |
24 |
2.5
(1.9 to 3.4) |
| All |
85 |
54 |
64 |
24 |
2.7
(2.3 to 3.1) |
PMF=proportional mortality fraction.
PMR=proportional mortality ratio. |
Discussion
| This paper has proved what has been long suspected to be the case:
Brookside Close, Coronation Street, Albert Square, and Emmerdale are
highly dangerous places to live. Characters tend to die young and from
a variety of obscure and often violent causes, ranging from the mystery
virus in Brookside, which killed three, to a plane crash
in Emmerdale, which killed four.
Of course soap opera has to be melodramatic to be interesting, but
should not the portrayal of death be a little more reflective of real
life? It seems sad that for soap operas to hold our interest they have
to be about as dangerous as Formula One racing.
We hope this paper will stimulate further investigation and
debate into the two soap operas for which we were unable to produce a
comprehensive cast list. In the meantime, however, characters in these
serials would be advised to wear good protective clothing (designed to
withstand sharp implements, sudden impacts, and fire) and to receive
regular counselling for the psychological impact of living in an
environment akin to a war zone. We apologise in advance to the estate
agents covering these areas, because for the rest of us the advice is
clear: don't buy your next house in Albert Square, Brookside Close,
Emmerdale, or Coronation Street. |
|
 | | Brookside: Gladys meets her controversial end with the help of her family
|
| Key Messages |
 |
|
Characters in soap operas lead very dangerous lives |
 |
|
Their lives are more dangerous even than those of Formula One
racing drivers or bomb disposal experts |
 |
|
People suffering from many forms of cancer and other serious
diseases have better five year survival rates than do these characters |
 |
|
Could the exaggerated portrayal of these violent and dangerous
lives be contributing to our distorted national perceptions about
violent crime and death? |
|
We thank the following for their help: Daran Little,
Coronation Street archivist; John Peake of Inside
Soap magazine; Simon Harris from Scottish Legal Life; the
rec.arts.tv.uk.eastenders newsgroup; and Julia Bunting
from the Office for National Statistics.
Funding: None.
Conflict of interest: None.
Department of Public Health and
Epidemiology,
King's College Hospital,
London SE5 9RS
Tim
Crayford, senior clinical fellow
Richard Hooper,
statistician
Sarah Evans, research
associate
Correspondence to: Dr Crayford
email: t.crayford@kcl.ac.uk
References1 Gerbner G, Gross L, Morgan M, Signorielli N. Portrayals of
mental illness in daytime television serials. Journalism
Quarterly 1985;62:384-7, 449.
2 Gerbner G, Gross L, Morgan M, Signorelli N. Health and
medicine on television. N Engl J Med 1981;305:901-4.
3 Office for National Statistics. Twentieth century
mortality on CD ROM (1990-1995). London: ONS, 1996.
4 Breslow N E, Day N E. Statistical methods in cancer
research. II. The design and analysis of cohort studies. World
Health Organisation-International Agency for Research on Cancer, 1987.
5 Office of Population Censuses and Surveys.
Classification of occupations 1980. London: OPCS, 1980.
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