Singer Elvis Presley died at age 42 in 1977.(Photo: NBC-TV via AP)
The latest study to look at rock and pop star deaths suggests the
odds were stacked against Elvis Presley, Michael Jackson and Amy
Winehouse.
But Keith Richards has statistics on his side.
The study, which expands on an earlier version, reconfirms that music
celebrities really are more likely than the rest of us to die young, but
shows that solo artists (such as Presley, Jackson and Winehouse) and
North Americans may face some extra risks, while those who had rough
childhoods may be particularly likely to succumb to alcohol and drugs.
Aging European rockers, though, get some good news: Once they've been
famous for a quarter century, they are no more likely than commoners to
die before their time. (Richards, the hard-living Rolling Stone who
turned 69 this week, is British and has been famous for about 50 years).
The research, published today in the online journal BMJ Open,
does not detail the risks for any individual, but uses official
websites, news stories, biographies and other publicly available records
to examine patterns among 1,489 pop and rock stars from Europe and
North America who became famous between 1956 and 2006. Of those, 137, or
9.2%, had died by early 2012.
The findings build on those from
a smaller study published in 2007 that found music stars were nearly
twice as likely as the general population to die prematurely, at least
in their first couple decades of fame, says lead researcher Mark Bellis
of the Centre for Public Health, Liverpool John Moores University in the
United Kingdom.
One new detail: Solo artists - defined as those
who have released at least one solo album - appear to have twice the
risk of early death as those who make music in bands, even when they
seem to be equally famous, Bellis says. "You often hear band members
talking in interviews about how they provide each other with peer
support," and that may make a difference, he says. He says it's also
possible that solo fame has some extra, corrosive effect on behavior.
The
study also hints that rockers who live hard, risky lives with lots of
drugs and alcohol often have something in common with non-famous people
who take similar risks: childhoods made difficult by factors from abuse
and neglect to sick or missing parents. So-called "adverse childhood
experiences" have been linked to adult drug and alcohol abuse and to
premature death in other studies.
Nearly half of the stars who
died from substance abuse, violence or suicide had such factors in
their backgrounds, while just one quarter of those who died otherwise
did. The researchers were not able to learn whether childhood stresses
were more common overall in stars who died than those who survived, but
they write that the findings suggest that "some of the risks accredited
to the rock and pop star lifestyle may in fact have more mundane roots."
Bellis says: "They may have exactly the same risk factors as everyone
else. Their wealth and fame may give them more access to drugs and
alcohol but not be the source of their problems."
If a rock
star study brings attention to the link between childhood adversity and
adult health risks, that will be a good thing, says Marvin Seppala,
chief medical officer at Hazelden, an addiction treatment and research
organization based in Center City, Minn. "It's increasingly accepted as a
risk factor for addiction," he says.
He says he hopes the
recording industry takes note and offers artists more support: "They
really should want to work to keep these people alive rather than
allowing them to have these tragic, public deaths."
Artists
established since 1980 have been less likely to die than those who
became famous earlier, so that may already be happening, Bellis says.
He says he hopes fans get the message that what they may perceive as a glamorous lifestyle can be dangerous.
Caroline Knorr, parenting editor with the advocacy group Common Sense
Media, agrees. "There's a history of glorifying substance abuse in the
rock star canon," and with Twitter, Facebook and other social media,
stars often now have a direct line to young fans, she said in an e-mail.
But she says kids can also be inspired by stars who have recovered
from substance abuse and other problems. She urges parents to share
those stories with their kids - and also to "remember that it is
possible for your kids to enjoy a star's music and not embrace the
lifestyle that the star purports to have."
USA Today