Abstract

Background: Although COVID-19 is a public health emergency, its consequences for the mental health of the population are still scarce. Likewise, its impact on critical situations such as suicide is still poorly explored in the literature. Therefore, this study aimed to analyze in a pioneering way, through lexical and content analysis techniques, the possible impacts of the new COVID-19 pandemic on suicide behavior.Methods: A lexical analysis, whose sample (not probabilistic, i.e., for convenience) was made up of full-length papers (abstracts) and short communications, about suicide behavior in COVID-19 pandemic, in PubMed and Virtual Health Library (VHL) was carried out following a lexical and content analysis using the software IRaMuTeQ, version 0.7 alpha 2.Results: The most frequent active words were suicide behavior (n = 649), covid (n = 439), health (n = 358), mental (n = 268), and social (n = 220). Four lexical classes were found and organized into two large groups: the first group, formed by the classes 2 (“methods for psychological treatment”) and 3 (“strategies to minimize the COVID-19 impacts”), was the most representative, totaling 50.6% of the text segments and second group formed by classes 1 (“signs of clinical depression”) and 4 (“COVID-19 pandemic as a public health problem”) with 49.4% of the text segments.Conclusion: Facing suicide behavior, the direct effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and the negative feelings and trigger of previous psychiatric illnesses; the measures to deal with the pandemic such as social isolation, decrease in the number of professionals, the opening hours of health establishments, and decrease in the demand for medications; and competing phenomena such as the spread of fake news and lack of empathy are aggressive and potentiating factors of suicidal ideation.

Highlights

  • Around one million deaths by suicide behavior are registered every year [1], which is one person every 40 s and 1.4% of all deaths worldwide, being the 18th leading cause of death in 2016

  • In the face of the new coronavirus (COVID-19), SARS-CoV-2, pandemic that occurred in Impacts of COVID-19 in the Suicide

  • The number of people whose mental health is affected tends to be greater than the number of people affected by the infection

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Around one million deaths by suicide behavior are registered every year [1], which is one person every 40 s and 1.4% of all deaths worldwide, being the 18th leading cause of death in 2016. In the face of the new coronavirus (COVID-19), SARS-CoV-2, pandemic that occurred in Impacts of COVID-19 in the Suicide. China, in December of 2019 [3], with more cases and news about people in quarantine [4], the isolation and feeling of loneliness are high. A Chinese study reported that patients infected with COVID-19 (or suspected of being infected) may experience intense emotional and behavioral reactions, such as fear, boredom, loneliness, anxiety, insomnia, or anger [8] as has been reported about similar situations in the past. This study aimed to analyze in a pioneering way, through lexical and content analysis techniques, the possible impacts of the new COVID-19 pandemic on suicide behavior

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call