Santa Fe New Mexican

Study: 259 have died while taking selfies since 2011

Since late 2011, 259 people have died taking photos

- By Allyson Chiu

The next time you’re standing at the edge of a scenic cliff or on top of a waterfall, take care when you have the urge to snap a quick selfie. It could very well be the last thing you do.

More than 250 people worldwide have died while taking selfies in the last six years, according to a new study from researcher­s associated with the All India Institute of Medical Sciences, a group of public medical colleges based in New Delhi. The findings, which analyzed news reports of the 259 selfie-related deaths from October 2011 to November 2017, were published in the July-August edition of the Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care.

Of the 259 deaths, researcher­s found the leading cause to be drowning, followed by incidents involving transporta­tion — for example, taking a selfie in front of an oncoming train — and falling from heights. Other causes of selfie-related death include animals, firearms and electrocut­ion.

“The selfie deaths have become a major public health problem,” Agam Bansal, the study’s lead author, told the Washington Post.

Though the study found India to have the highest number of deaths of all countries, numerous reports of fatal selfie incidents have also come from Russia, the United States and Pakistan.

“If you’re just standing, simply taking it with a celebrity or something, that’s not harmful,” he said. “But if that selfie is accompanie­d with risky behavior then that’s what makes the selfies dangerous.”

“What worries me the most is that it is a preventabl­e cause of death,” Bansal said. “Taking a toll on these many numbers just because you want a perfect selfie because you want a lot of likes, shares on Facebook, Twitter or other social media, I don’t think this is worth compromisi­ng a life for such a thing.”

Bansal added he was also concerned about how many of the selfie-related fatalities involved young people. More than 85 percent of the victims were between the ages of 10 and 30, Bansal said.

In 2018 alone, there have already been several selfie-related deaths. In May, a man in India tried to take a selfie with an injured bear and was mauled to death, the Independen­t reported.

Just last month, two people died in the U.S. in separate cases also involving selfies.

On Sept. 5, an 18-year-old hiker from Jerusalem died after he fell more than 800 feet off a cliff at Yosemite National Park, according to ABC News. The man’s mother said he had been trying to take a selfie at the edge of Nevada Fall, a popular waterfall in the park, when he fell, the Times of Israel reported.

Roughly two weeks later, a 32-yearold California woman met a similar fate while hiking at Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore in Michigan when she slipped and fell to her death after stopping at the edge of a 200-foot cliff to snap some selfies, the Detroit Free Press reported.

Mohit Jain, an orthopedic surgeon who was not involved in the recent study but has done research into selfie deaths, described the work of Banal and fellow researcher­s Chandan Garg and Abhijit Pakhare as “really necessary” to “make people aware that you can die while taking a selfie.”

Jain published his own study last year about selfie-related mortality in the Internatio­nal Journal of Injury Control and Safety Promotion.

Jain’s research found that 75 people had died attempting to take selfies from 2014 to mid-2016.

“It’s like a man-made disaster,” he told the Post. “It’s not a natural disaster.”

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