Back to Search Start Over

Suicide trends in the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic: interrupted time series analysis of preliminary data from 21 countries

Authors :
Pirkis, Jane
John, Ann
Shin, Sangsoo
DelPozo-Banos, Marcos
Arya, Vikas
Aguilar, Pablo Analuisa
Appleby, Louis
Arensman, Ella
Bantjes, Jason
Baran, Anna
Bertolote, Jose M.
Borges, Guilherme
Brečić, Petrana
Caine, Eric
Castelpietra, Giulio
Chang, Shu-Sen
Colchester, David
Crompton, David
Curkovic, Marko
Deisenhammer, Eberhard A.
Du, Chengan
Dwyer, Jeremy
Erlangsen, Annette
Faust, Jeremy S.
Fortune, Sarah
Garrett, Andrew
George, Devin
Gerstner, Rebekka
Gilissen, Renske
Gould, Madelyn
Hawton, Keith
Kanter, Joseph
Kapur, Navneet
Khan, Murad
Kirtley, Olivia J.
Knipe, Duleeka
Kolves, Kairi
Leske, Stuart
Marahatta, Kedar
Mittendorfer-Rutz, Ellenor
Neznanov, Nikolay
Niederkrotenthaler, Thomas
Nielsen, Emma
Nordentoft, Merete
Oberlerchner, Herwig
O'Connor, Rory C.
Pearson, Melissa
Phillips, Michael R.
Platt, Steve
Plener, Paul L.
Psota, Georg
Qin, Ping
Radeloff, Daniel
Rados, Christa
Reif, Andreas
Reif-Leonhard, Christine
Rozanov, Vsevolod
Schlang, Christiane
Schneider, Barbara
Semenova, Natalia
Sinyor, Mark
Townsend, Ellen
Ueda, Michiko
Vijayakumar, Lakshmi
Webb, Roger T.
Weerasinghe, Manjula
Zalsman, Gil
Gunnell, David
Spittal, Matthew J.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Background:\ud The COVID-19 pandemic is having profound mental health consequences for many people. Concerns have been expressed that, at their most extreme, these consequences could manifest as increased suicide rates. We aimed to assess the early effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on suicide rates around the world.\ud \ud Methods:\ud We sourced real-time suicide data from countries or areas within countries through a systematic internet search and recourse to our networks and the published literature. Between Sept 1 and Nov 1, 2020, we searched the official websites of these countries’ ministries of health, police agencies, and government-run statistics agencies or equivalents, using the translated search terms “suicide” and “cause of death”, before broadening the search in an attempt to identify data through other public sources. Data were included from a given country or area if they came from an official government source and were available at a monthly level from at least Jan 1, 2019, to July 31, 2020. Our internet searches were restricted to countries with more than 3 million residents for pragmatic reasons, but we relaxed this rule for countries identified through the literature and our networks. Areas within countries could also be included with populations of less than 3 million. We used an interrupted time-series analysis to model the trend in monthly suicides before COVID-19 (from at least Jan 1, 2019, to March 31, 2020) in each country or area within a country, comparing the expected number of suicides derived from the model with the observed number of suicides in the early months of the pandemic (from April 1 to July 31, 2020, in the primary analysis).\ud \ud Findings:\ud We sourced data from 21 countries (16 high-income and five upper-middle-income countries), including whole-country data in ten countries and data for various areas in 11 countries). Rate ratios (RRs) and 95% CIs based on the observed versus expected numbers of suicides showed no evidence of a significant increase in risk of suicide since the pandemic began in any country or area. There was statistical evidence of a decrease in suicide compared with the expected number in 12 countries or areas: New South Wales, Australia (RR 0·81 [95% CI 0·72–0·91]); Alberta, Canada (0·80 [0·68–0·93]); British Columbia, Canada (0·76 [0·66–0·87]); Chile (0·85 [0·78–0·94]); Leipzig, Germany (0·49 [0·32–0·74]); Japan (0·94 [0·91–0·96]); New Zealand (0·79 [0·68–0·91]); South Korea (0·94 [0·92–0·97]); California, USA (0·90 [0·85–0·95]); Illinois (Cook County), USA (0·79 [0·67–0·93]); Texas (four counties), USA (0·82 [0·68–0·98]); and Ecuador (0·74 [0·67–0·82]).\ud \ud Interpretation:\ud This is the first study to examine suicides occurring in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in multiple countries. In high-income and upper-middle-income countries, suicide numbers have remained largely unchanged or declined in the early months of the pandemic compared with the expected levels based on the pre-pandemic period. We need to remain vigilant and be poised to respond if the situation changes as the longer-term mental health and economic effects of the pandemic unfold.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22150366
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..64aafedafe9b94e304d06014127c6d74