A new study published in The Lancet Psychiatry journal has put teenagers who identify themselves as being associated with goth subculture at a greater risk of depression and self-harm.
The study doesn’t claim that being a goth increases the risk of depression or self-harm, but shows that teenagers who identified very strongly with being a goth at age 15 were three times more likely to be clinically depressed and were five times more likely to self-harm at age 18 than young people who did not identify with the goth subculture.
Contemporary goth youth subculture has been linked with deliberate self harm, but until now whether this association is confounded by the characteristics of young people, their families, or their circumstances was unclear.
Researchers used data from the UK Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) to investigate whether identifying with the goth subculture at age 15 is linked with depression and self-harm in early adulthood. The study involved analysis of data from 3694 teenagers who provided information on self-harm and depressive mood and the extent to which they identified as a goth at 15 years, and their self-reported depression and self-harm at age 18. Participants were also asked about identification with a variety of other youth subcultures including sporty, populars, skaters, chavs, loners, keeners, and bimbos.
According to researchers, the more young people identified with the goth subculture, the higher their likelihood of self-harm and depression. The study authors note that compared to young people who did not identify as a goth at age 15, those who “somewhat” identified as a goth were 1.6 times as likely to have scores in the clinical range for depression at age 18, and teenagers who “very much” identified as belonging to the goth subculture were more than three times as likely to be depressed.
Although some other subcultures were also associated with adult depression and self-harm (ie, skaters and loners), the associated was strongest for goths. Young people who self-identified as “sporty” were least likely to have depression or self-harm at age 18.
Goth identification remained a strong predictor of future self-harm and depression even when a wide range of other individual, family, and social factors that are known to increase the risk of self-harm and depression, including previous depression and self-harm, early emotional and behavioural difficulties, psychiatric disorder, history of bullying, and the mental health of mothers, were taken into account.
As this is an observational study, no definitive conclusions can be drawn about cause and effect, and the findings cannot be used to claim that becoming a goth causes an increased risk of self-harm and depression, say the researchers.
They speculate that the goth subculture could provide an important source of validation and a community within which young people who do not conform with societal norms can be understood. “Teenagers who are susceptible to depression or with a tendency to self-harm might be attracted to the goth subculture which is known to embrace marginalised individuals from all backgrounds, including those with mental health problems,” explains co-author Dr Rebecca Pearson from the University of Bristol in the UK.
She adds, “Alternatively, the extent to which young people self-identify with the goth subculture may represent the extent to which at-risk young people feel isolated, ostracised, or stigmatised by society. These young people may be attracted to like-minded goths who face similar stressors.”
The authors conclude that more work needs to be done with young people in the goth community to identify those at risk of depression and self-harm and to provide support.
Writing in a linked Comment, Professor Rory O’Connor from the University of Glasgow in the UK and Professor Gwendolyn Portzky from Ghent University in Belgium say, “Clinicians working with adolescents showing an interest in goth subculture and displaying signs of goth identification should be aware of the increased risk of depression and self-harm in later adolescence. Further monitoring and assessment of self-harm risk is recommended for these young people.”
They add, “It is, however, important to determine whether adolescents identifying with goth subculture seek professional help for emotional problems and whether they have different help-seeking attitudes compared to adolescents who identify with other cultures. If adolescents identifying as goth seek less professional help and have different attitudes, this finding will have important implications for the management of risk of depression and self-harm in this vulnerable group.”