Today, TK Learned:

... that blog posts with multiple tables must be handled with extreme care.
  • All major brand beers are hurting except for Pabst Blue Ribbon, because hipsters keep drinking it. That's good, because PBR is toxic. [Foreign Policy]
  • DoJ announces that it is reviewing accounting irregularities in publicly traded Chinese companies, and their stocks tank. This will be fun. [New York Times: Dealbook]
  • Georgetown Law Center had a gunman scare that ended up being nothing. [Above the Law]
  • Trivia time: What is the largest American city that is, directly or indirectly, named after a Roman political leader? Hint: it is among the top 100 largest cities in America. [Volokh Conspiracy]
  • The legendary Shin Joong-Hyun recalls: ‎"Later, I was playing a 'psychedelic' song and some American hippies – antiwar protesters – came to listen. I became friends with them, and they taught me what psychedelic music really was. They also gave me LSD." [The Guardian] (HT to reader).
  • China might be slowing the democratization of Asia. [Boston Globe]
  • Radiohead is not coming, you damn dirty hippies. [Slate]
  • Mobile strip clubs at NFL tailgates! [NBC]
Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.

Suicide in Korea Series: II. The Numbers


[Series Index]

Before there can be any meaningful discussion about suicides in Korea, we need a clear picture on the facts about suicides first. Looking at the demographics and trends in suicide, one can glean the starting point on understanding the suicide phenomenon in Korea.

If you can read Korean, Statistics Korea -- the governmental body that periodically collects national statistics -- has the official collection of Korean death statistics. Here are highlights of suicide-related information that the Korean culled from the overall statistics. Table numbers in the bracket refer to the table numbers in the Statistics Korea page.

Who Commits Suicide?

- [Table 4] Overall, suicide is the fourth leading cause of death in Korea as of 2009. But incredibly, when the cause of death is broken down by age, suicide is the leading cause of death for Koreans between the ages of 10 and 39. The large number of people dying from cancer beginning at age 40 end up pushing down suicide's ranking.

- [Table 6] In 2009, 15,413 Koreans died from suicide, which is 6.24% of all deaths in Korea that year. For the sake of comparison, the leading cause of death was cancer, which constituted 28.6% of all deaths.

- [Table 6] The number of suicides in 2009, broken down by age and gender:

Age
Male
Female
Total
Male/Total
10-19
247
199
446
0.55
20-29
932
875
1,807
0.52
30-39
1,528
1,114
2,642
0.58
40-49
2,010
846
2,856
0.7
50-59
1,965
632
2,597
0.76
60-69
1,530
544
2,074
0.74
70-79
1,191
708
1,899
0.63
80+
521
557
1,078
0.48

(Apologies if the tables turn out to be a little wacky -- Blogger does not seem to handle tables very well.)

One can see that the number of suicides peaks at ages 40-49 for men and 30-39 for women. Also notable is that the ratio between male and female suicides. Worldwide, suicide is overwhelmingly a male phenomenon -- in the OECD, male to female suicide rate is more than 3 to 1, or approximately 77% of all suicides. But in Korea, the number of male suicides never goes over 77% -- which means Korean women are far more suicidal than average women living in comparable economies.

(More after the jump)

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.



- [Table 7] The mortality rate, and the mortality rate involving suicide, broken down by age and gender:


Total Deaths (per 100,000)
Suicides (per 100,000)
Suicides/Total Deaths (%)

Total
Male
Female
Total
Male
Female

All ages
497.3
553.7
440.7
31
39.9
22.1
6.23
10-19
44.3
53.6
33.5
13
13.5
12.4
29.35
20-29
111.9
131.8
90.4
49.6
49.7
49.7
44.33
30-39
182.3
227.2
135.5
62.7
70.9
54.2
34.39
40-49
412.7
589.7
229.6
65.7
90.8
39.6
15.92
50-59
892.2
1326.3
457.9
82
123.8
40.1
9.19
60-69
2023.7
3012.8
1149.5
104
162.8
51.6
5.14
70-79
5893.6
8529.5
4227.3
162.6
257.5
101.8
2.76
80+
37928.2
47543.9
34534
394.2
671.8
295.2
1.04

One can see that the mortality rate involving suicide increases dramatically as the age goes up. This is contrary to the worldwide trend, where people proportionately commit less suicide as they get older. However, that is slightly misleading because it gives the inaccurate impression that older Koreans die mostly by suicide. So the last column was added to give a perspective of the proportion of suicides to total deaths. One can see that it comports with the data from Table 4 above, that for people aged 10 to 39, suicide is the leading cause of death -- partially because of the prevalence of suicide, partially because younger people are healthier and are less likely to die from causes other suicide (e.g. diseases).

- [Table 11] Suicides broken down by occupation, ages 15-64.

Occupation
Total Deaths
Suicides
Suicide/Total Deaths (%)
Total
74 347
11 251
6.61
Managers
1 545
220
7.02
Professionals
3 666
589
6.22
Clerks
5 204
961
5.42
Service and Sales
7 494
1 304
5.75
Agriculture, Horticulture
and Maritime
5 001
464
10.78
Craft & Related Trade
2 742
361
7.6
Plant & Machine Operators
1 349
188
7.18
Manual Laborers
3 417
458
7.46
Unemployed, Students, Homemakers
41 707
6 280
6.64
Other
2 222
426
5.22


Here, the notable part is that while the proportion of suicides is high among all occupations, farmers and fishermen apparently have a significantly higher suicide rate. This is consistent with the fact that older Koreans are more likely to commit suicide, because most farmers and fishermen in Korea tend to be older as the younger people all left for the city.

Yearly Trends

- [Table 5] shows that suicide has been around 7th or 8th leading cause of death between 1999 to 2002. Then the ranking jumps in 2003 to 5th leading cause of death. Between 2002 and 2003, the mortality rate attributable to suicide (per 100,000) jumped from 17.9 to 22.6. Between 2003 and 2009, suicide was either 4th or 5th leading cause of death in Korea.

- [Table 8] Mortality rate (per 100,000) attributable to suicide, from 1999 to 2009


Overall Mortality Rate
Suicide Mortality Rate
Change vs Prev. Yr (%)

Total
Male
Female
Total
Male
Female
Total
Male
Female
1999
520.2
576.0
464.0
15.0
20.9
9.0
n/a
n/a
n/a
2000
517.9
571.9
463.3
13.6
18.8
8.3
(9.33)
(10.05)
(7.78)
2001
504.5
557.8
450.7
14.4
20.2
8.6
5.88
7.45
3.61
2002
509.7
557.9
461.2
17.9
24.6
11.1
24.31
21.78
29.07
2003
506.1
556.6
455.4
22.6
31.0
14.1
26.26
26.02
27.03
2004
503.7
556.1
451.0
23.7
32.4
14.9
4.87
4.52
5.67
2005
501.0
550.5
451.1
24.7
32.9
16.4
4.22
1.54
10.07
2006
495.6
545.7
445.2
21.8
29.5
14.1
(11.74)
(10.33)
(14.02)
2007
498.4
547.9
448.7
24.8
31.5
18.1
13.76
6.78
28.37
2008
498.2
553.1
443.0
26.0
33.4
18.7
4.84
6.03
3.31
2009
497.3
553.7
440.7
31.0
39.9
22.1
19.23
19.46
18.18

For the purpose of understanding Korea’s suicide phenomenon, this chart may be the most helpful one. The first thing that jumps out is the sheer magnitude of increase. The overall mortality rate in Korea steadily decreased in Korea for the last ten years, but suicide mortality rate more than doubled. At 31 suicides per 100,000, Korea’s suicide mortality rate is nearly three times the OECD average of 11.1. Even more astonishing is that Korea’s suicide mortality rate was only 7.4 per 100,000 back in 1989 – in other words, the suicide rate doubled between 1989 and 1999, and doubled again between 1999 and 2009.

Another notable point is the rate of change between men and women. In the five years between 1999 and 2003, the suicide rate for both men and women rose and fell at an approximately same rate. But between 2004 and 2009 (and particularly in 2007,) the rate of women suicide increased dramatically.

Why Commit Suicide?

On a separate page of Statistics Korea, there is more information about suicidal impulses and what causes them.

- [Table 12] Suicidal impulse in 2010.


Suicidal Impulse Felt
Total
7.7
Male
6.3
Female
9.0
Age

15-19
10.1
20-29
7.5
30-39
7.7
40-49
8.6
50-59
8.2
60+
5.3

- [Table 12] Causes of suicidal impulse


Economic difficulties
Relation-ship/Dating
Disease/
disability
Job
Loneli-ness
Family issues
School grades
Dispute in social life
Other
Total
38.8
3.5
11.2
6.4
12.9
15.1
6.6
0.8
4.7
Male
44.9
3.7
11.3
9.8
11.0
8.6
6.9
0.6
3.2
Female
34.6
3.3
11.1
4.1
14.1
19.6
6.4
1.0
5.7
Age









15-19
10.5
1.9
2.2
1.6
11.2
12.6
53.4
3.8
2.8
20-29
30.0
7.0
5.9
15.0
16.5
12.9
5.3
1.0
6.4
30-39
37.4
3.4
4.8
9.5
17.4
20.5
 -
1.0
6.0
40-49
50.4
2.6
8.4
4.7
10.7
17.5
 -
0.3
5.5
50-59
52.7
3.3
14.2
4.4
9.4
14.1
 -
 -
2.0
60+
35.3
2.4
36.2
1.2
11.4
8.8
 -
 -
4.6


This chart may as well be called: “What stresses out Koreans.” The factors that stand out in this chart are not particularly surprising. School-year children are stressed out by grades. People in their 20s are worried about jobs, relationship and being alone. Middle-aged people are concerned about making a living, and older people are worried about their health.

One notable thing is that consistent with the world trend, older people tend to feel less suicidal – which conflicts with the actual result in which older Korean are proportionately more likely to commit suicide, as discussed above.

The Takeaways

Among the many insights could be gleaned from this set of data, the Korean would highlight the following:

- The factors that causes suicidal impulse for Koreans are not particularly surprising. The surprising part is that a huge number of Koreans carry out the impulse to practice.

- Although suicide numbers are high in all demographics of Koreans, women and the elderly are particularly at risk compared to the worldwide trend.

Korea's suicide phenomenon is a very recent phenomenon. About 20 years ago, Korea actually had a low suicide rate. Even as recently as 10 years or so ago, Korea's suicide rates were not out of step with the world average. So what happened to Korea around 10 years ago? That will be the starting point of our inquiry.

Got a question or a comment for the Korean? Email away at askakorean@gmail.com.