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Study: Teen Suicide Attempts Climbed 22 Percent During Covid-19 Lockdowns

They found that depression and anxiety symptoms doubled in children as suicide attempts among young people rose substantially

Suicide attempts among young people soared by 22 percent during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Before the pandemic hit, an average of 102 children per month attempted suicide and, as a result, visited emergency rooms across 18 countries, according to a recent study.

A young kid having pending thoughts. Suicide soared by 22% among young people during the COVID-19 pandemic. COTTONBRO/SWNS TALKER

Suicide attempts climbed to an average of 125 per month during the pandemic — an increase of 22 percent.

“What this 22 percent increase means is that in an average emergency department setting, there were 102 children and adolescent visits per month for suicide attempts before the COVID-19 pandemic, which increased to 125 per month during the pandemic,” said Dr. Sheri Madigan, a clinical psychologist at the University of Calgary, Canada.

Hospitals also saw an eight percent rise in visits from those struggling with suicidal thoughts.

The rise occurred even though total pediatric emergency visits fell by 32 percent during the same period.

According to the research team, reasons for this increase are down to more young people facing mental health issues while living in the Covid era.

They found that depression and anxiety symptoms doubled in children and adolescents during the first year of the pandemic.

A young kid showing signs of depression. Depression and anxiety symptoms doubled in children and adolescents during the first year of the pandemic. KAT SMITH/SWNS TALKER

During the period of social isolation, children’s screen time rose greatly as physical activity levels dwindled.

Many families were also left in turmoil as jobs were lost, family violence increased and the mental health of parents deteriorated.

Dr. Madigan said: “These are all accelerants to mental distress.

“Children have the ability to show resilience in difficult times, but they were pushed past what is tolerable, beyond their capacity-to-cope threshold.

“And now, far more kids and teens are in crisis than was the case before the pandemic.”

According to Dr. Madigan, before the pandemic around one in five children across the globe were experiencing some form of mental illness.

However, only 25 percent who were in serious need of treatment received it.

A father consoling his son. Many families were also left in turmoil as jobs were lost, family violence increased and the mental health of parents deteriorated. KINDEL MEDIA/SWNS TALKER

According to the charity Mind: “One in four people will experience a mental health problem of some kind each year in England.”

They add: “One in five people have suicidal thoughts.”

Dr. Madigan said: “In our earlier work on mental health in the pandemic, we determined that kids were in crisis and that we needed to bolster services and resources, or it was going to get worse.

“There’s been a debate during the pandemic whether the kids are alright or not alright.

“Now that more data have been published and analyzed, we can more precisely answer that question. The kids are, in fact, not alright.”

The researchers analyzed 42 studies looking at 11 million pediatric emergency department visits across 18 countries.

They compared the data from studies from January 2020 to July 2021.

Dr. Madigan said: “We will continue to monitor the incoming data to see if this trend of increasing emergency department visits for suicide attempts and suicide ideation among children and adolescents continues to climb as the pandemic changes and evolves.”

“We can’t ignore that the mental health of children and adolescents is in crisis.”

“We need to prioritize the creation of mental health resources, supports, and services now, to help children shift from languishing to flourishing.”

Now, Dr. Madigan urges governments to invest in community resources and infrastructure in and out of schools to support the treatment and identification of mental illness.

Produced in association with SWNS Talker

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