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brkh47 t1_j9kphoh wrote

Sir James Milne Wilson, who served as Premier of Tasmania from 1869 to 1872, was born on 29 February 1812 and died on 29 February 1880.

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BrokenEye3 t1_j9kt958 wrote

Now I'm no statistician (thank god), but I wonder if it might have less to do with any of those factors on their own than with the very fact that there are multiple factors that could potentially result in you being more likely to die around your birthday.

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myeff t1_j9kx8j8 wrote

Death rates also increase at Christmas/New Year's, for probably the same reasons.

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ididitforcheese t1_j9l2pv8 wrote

My dad died on his 91st birthday. Felt like he was hanging on for it.

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WR810 t1_j9lplxi wrote

Not to be ghoulish but my goal has been to die on my birthday (far in the future, when I am very old).

Something about that symmetry appeals to me.

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RockItGuyDC t1_j9m2awt wrote

So, six months from my birthday I'm invincible? That's how statistics work, right? Got it.

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FeralBottleofMtDew t1_j9mr39u wrote

I read that death rates among Christians tend to drop before Christmas and spike immediately after Christmas. The same happens with Jewish people around Passover. Sort of like they are hanging on for that last big event with their family.

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lucky_ducker t1_j9mvimm wrote

My wife was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer in October at the age of 53. Prognosis: 2% chance of surviving 5 years.

A year later in December, had a massive "55 and still alive!" birthday party with a couple of dozen friends.

Turned 56 a year later. Died the next day a little past nine in the morning.

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substantial-freud t1_j9r1p7l wrote

Not that!

“Attribute”, as the word suggests, means to regard something or someone as the cause of something else.

If a phenomenon is “variously attributed” is that there are various theories about the cause, not necessarily that there are several causes.

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