Population Psychiatry, Suicide and Informatics, Swansea University, Swansea, UK.
Public Health Wales NHS Trust, Swansea, UK.
F1000Res. 2020 Sep 4;9:1097. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.25522.2. eCollection 2020.
The COVID-19 pandemic has caused considerable morbidity, mortality and disruption to people's lives around the world. There are concerns that rates of suicide and suicidal behaviour may rise during and in its aftermath. Our living systematic review synthesises findings from emerging literature on incidence and prevalence of suicidal behaviour as well as suicide prevention efforts in relation to COVID-19, with this iteration synthesising relevant evidence up to 19 October 2020. Automated daily searches feed into a web-based database with screening and data extraction functionalities. Eligibility criteria include incidence/prevalence of suicidal behaviour, exposure-outcome relationships and effects of interventions in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic. Outcomes of interest are suicide, self-harm or attempted suicide and suicidal thoughts. No restrictions are placed on language or study type, except for single-person case reports. We exclude one-off cross-sectional studies without either pre-pandemic measures or comparisons of COVID-19 positive vs. unaffected individuals. Searches identified 6,226 articles. Seventy-eight articles met our inclusion criteria. We identified a further 64 relevant cross-sectional studies that did not meet our revised inclusion criteria. Thirty-four articles were not peer-reviewed (e.g. research letters, pre-prints). All articles were based on observational studies. There was no consistent evidence of a rise in suicide but many studies noted adverse economic effects were evolving. There was evidence of a rise in community distress, fall in hospital presentation for suicidal behaviour and early evidence of an increased frequency of suicidal thoughts in those who had become infected with COVID-19. Research evidence of the impact of COVID-19 on suicidal behaviour is accumulating rapidly. This living review provides a regular synthesis of the most up-to-date research evidence to guide public health and clinical policy to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on suicide risk as the longer term impacts of the pandemic on suicide risk are researched.
COVID-19 大流行在全球范围内造成了相当大的发病率、死亡率和对人们生活的干扰。人们担心自杀和自杀行为的发生率可能会在疫情期间及其之后上升。我们的实时系统综述综合了与 COVID-19 相关的自杀行为发生率和流行率以及自杀预防工作的新兴文献中的发现,此次综述综合了截至 2020 年 10 月 19 日的相关证据。
自动每日搜索将信息输入到一个具有筛选和数据提取功能的网络数据库中。纳入标准包括自杀行为的发生率/流行率、暴露-结果关系以及与 COVID-19 大流行相关的干预措施的效果。感兴趣的结果是自杀、自残或自杀未遂以及自杀念头。本研究没有对语言或研究类型进行限制,除了单人病例报告。我们排除了没有进行大流行前测量或 COVID-19 阳性与未受影响个体比较的一次性横断面研究。
搜索共确定了 6226 篇文章。78 篇文章符合我们的纳入标准。我们还确定了另外 64 篇符合我们修订后的纳入标准的相关横断面研究。34 篇文章未经同行评审(例如研究信件、预印本)。所有文章均基于观察性研究。没有一致的证据表明自杀率上升,但许多研究指出,经济的不利影响正在演变。有证据表明社区痛苦加剧,自杀行为住院人数下降,以及感染 COVID-19 的人群中自杀念头的早期频率增加。关于 COVID-19 对自杀行为影响的研究证据正在迅速积累。本实时综述定期综合最新研究证据,以指导公共卫生和临床政策,减轻 COVID-19 对自杀风险的影响,同时研究大流行对自杀风险的长期影响。