作者
David Gunnell, Louis Appleby, Ella Arensman, Keith Hawton, Ann John, Nav Kapur, Murad Khan, Rory C O'Connor, Jane Pirkis, Eric D Caine, Lai Fong Chan, Shu-Sen Chang, Ying-Yeh Chen, Helen Christensen, Rakhi Dandona, Michael Eddleston, Annette Erlangsen, Jill Harkavy-Friedman, Olivia J Kirtley, Duleeka Knipe, Flemming Konradsen, Shiwei Liu, Sally McManus, Lars Mehlum, Matthew Miller, Paul Moran, Jacqui Morrissey, Christine Moutier, Thomas Niederkrotenthaler, Merete Nordentoft, Siobhan O'Neill, Andrew Page, Michael R Phillips, Steve Platt, Maurizio Pompili, Ping Qin, Mohsen Rezaeian, Morton Silverman, Mark Sinyor, Steven Stack, Ellen Townsend, Gustavo Turecki, Lakshmi Vijayakumar, Paul SF Yip
发表日期
2020/6/1
来源
The Lancet Psychiatry
卷号
7
期号
6
页码范围
468-471
出版商
Elsevier
简介
The mental health effects of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic might be profound1 and there are suggestions that suicide rates will rise, although this is not inevitable. Suicide is likely to become a more pressing concern as the pandemic spreads and has longer-term effects on the general population, the economy, and vulnerable groups. Preventing suicide therefore needs urgent consideration. The response must capitalise on, but extend beyond, general mental health policies and practices. There is some evidence that deaths by suicide increased in the USA during the 1918–19 influenza pandemic2 and among older people in Hong Kong during the 2003 severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic. 3 The current context is different and evolving. A wide-ranging interdisciplinary response that
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