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2024

ANUÁRIO DO HOSPITAL
DONA ESTEFÂNIA

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PEDIATRIC SUICIDE ATTEMPTS LAGGED DURING THE COVID19 PANDEMIC A EUROPEAN MULTICENTER STUDY

Ana Moscoso1, Anthony Cousien2, Giulia Serra3, Annette Erlangsen4, Mar Vila5, Ljubica Paradžik6, Sandra Pires7, Francisco Villar5, Marija Bogadi6, Pedro Caldeira da Silva7, Stefano Vicari3, Mette Falkenberg Krantz4, Richard Delorme1 & & the ACE-COVID study group

1 - Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Department, Robert Debré Hospital, APHP & Université Paris Cité Paris, 48, Boulevard Sérurier, 75935 Paris Cedex 19, Paris, France.
2 - Université Paris Cité and Université Sorbonne Paris Nord, Inserm, IAME, F‑75018, Paris, France.
3 - Child and Adolescent Neuropsychiatry Unit, Bambino Gesù Children’s Hospital, IRCCS, Rome, Italy.
4 - Danish Research Institute for Suicide Prevention, Mental Health Centre Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
5 - Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
6 - Psychiatric Hospital for Children and Youth, Zagreb, Croatia.
7 - Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Department, Hospital D. Estefânia, CHLC, Lisbon, Portugal.

- Publicação em versão integral na revista Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health

Resumo:
Background: Elevated rates of suicidal behavior were reported during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, information is scarce on patients’ profiles during this period. Studies evoke the potential adverse effects of the mandatory lockdown, but they remain relatively speculative.
Methods: We monitored fluctuations in suicide attempts (SA) in six European countries. We gathered data, retrospectively for under 18-year-old SA episodes (1 January 2018 to 31 December 2021), through records of psychiatric emergency services. We collected clinical profiles individually. We extracted environmental indicators by month, as provided by Oxford COVID-19 Government Response Tracker (OxCGRT). We used the Pruned Exact Linear Time (PELT) method to identify breakpoints in SA episodes reported for each country, and logistic regressions to estimate changes in patients’ characteristics after the breakpoints. Finally, we used a univariate and multivariate negative binomial model to assess the link between SA and OxCGRT indicators, accounting for the delay (lag) between the interventions and their impact on SA.
Results: The study comprised 2,833 children and adolescents (mean age = 15.1 years (SD 1.6); M: F sex-ratio = 1:5.4). A significant increase in SA was found either 6 or 10 months after the beginning of the pandemic, varying by country. Patients were more likely to be girls (aOR = 1.77 [1.34; 2.34]) and used SA methods “other than self-poisoning” (aOR = 1.34 [1.05; 1.7]). In the multivariate model, an association was found between SA and the contact tracing indicator with an 11 months delay, and the number of COVID-19 deaths with a 3-months delay.
Conclusions: Findings confirmed a delayed increase in SA during the COVID-19 pandemic in children and adolescents as well as changes in patients’ profiles. The duration and severity of the pandemic emerged as the strongest predictor in the rise of SA. If faced with a similar pandemic in the future, the gap between the onset of pandemic and the increase in suicide attempts presents an opportunity for prevention.

Palavras Chave: Children and adolescentes; COVID-19 duration and severity; Oxford COVID-19 government response tracker (OxCGRT); Suicide attempts.