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Theoretical Mapping of Suicidal Risk Factors During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Mini-Review

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHIATRY
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.589614

Keywords

burdensomeness; thwarted belongingness; cognitive distortions; COVID-19; suicide; diathesis

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Preventing suicide during the COVID-19 pandemic is more challenging than ever before, with common risk factors including fear of COVID-19, economic instability, poor access to healthcare, pre-existing psychiatric disorders, and social disconnect. Insights from studies suggest that perceived burdensomeness, thwarted belongingness, stress sensitivity, and cognitive errors may be reasons behind these risk factors. Awareness of COVID-19 stressors and community-based approaches like gatekeeper training, online psychotherapy, and techniques such as mindfulness and cognitive behavior therapy can help reduce suicide risk.
Suicide prevention in times of COVID-19 pandemic has become more challenging than ever due to unusual circumstances. The common risk factors identified with regard to suicidal behavior are fear of COVID-19, economic instability, poor access to healthcare facilities, pre-existing psychiatric disorders, and social disconnect. The studies done so far have reported either case studies or have made an effort to understand the risk factors. An understanding of the underlying causal pattern from existing theories, behind these risks, will enable adopting appropriate prevention mechanisms. Hence, this review examines evidence related to risk factors of suicides that occurred during COVID 19 and discusses it in the light of three major theoretical approaches: interpersonal model, stress diathesis model, and cognitive model. The insights obtained from the three viewpoints reveal that perceived burdensomeness, thwarted belongingness, stress sensitivity, cognitive errors such as magnification, catastrophic thinking, arbitrary inference, and mind-reading are likely reasons behind these risk factors for suicide. It is suggested that awareness regarding COVID-19 stressors, use of community-based approaches like gatekeeper training, and brief online psychotherapy by using techniques of mindfulness, interpersonal psychotherapy, and cognitive behavior therapy can be useful in reducing suicide risk during COVID-19.

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