From the Journals

COVID-19 linked to rise in suicide-related ED visits among youth


 

FROM JAMA PSYCHIATRY

‘More severe distress’ found among girls

In the most recent period evaluated, starting Feb. 21, 2021, and extending to March 20, there was a 50.6% increase among girls in the mean number of weekly ED visits for suspected suicide attempts, compared with the same period in 2019. For boys, the increase was 3.7%.

Higher rates of suicide attempts among girls have been reported by others independent of the COVID-19 pandemic, but the CDC investigators led by Ellen Yard, PhD, a researcher in the CDC’s National Center for Environmental Health, Chamblee, Ga., reported that others have also found greater suicide ideation and attempts by girls during the pandemic. This new report “suggests more severe distress among young females than has been identified in previous reports during the pandemic.”

Neither study was designed to isolate the reason or reasons for an increase in suicide-related ED visits overall or among girls specifically, but Dr. Yard and her coinvestigators speculated that social distancing and isolation during the COVID-19 pandemic might be affecting girls more.

The faster increase in suicide attempts among girls compared with boys “speaks to the importance of upstream prevention to prevent this group from becoming suicidal in the first place as well as improving suicide care both during and after ED visits,” said Dr. Yard, who was interviewed about this research.

For clinicians, she recommended “scaling up adoption of evidence-based best practice.” She cited two such resources from the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention (NAASP). One resource is the Best Practices in Care Transitions for Individuals with Suicide Risk: Inpatient Care to Outpatient Care; the other is called Recommended Standard Care. Both are available online for free from the NAASP.

Dr. Erickson-Ridout and Dr. Yard reported no potential conflicts of interest.

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