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    Date Issued2021 (1)2020 (2)Author
    Abi Zeid Daou, Margarita (3)
    Geller, Jeffrey L. (3)Halbreich, Uriel (1)Rached, Gaelle (1)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Psychiatry (3)Implementation Science and Practice Advances Research Center (1)Law and Psychiatry Program (1)Document TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordMental and Social Health (3)Psychiatry (3)Psychiatry and Psychology (3)COVID-19 (2)pandemic (2)View MoreJournalBJPsych Advances (1)Psychiatric News (1)The Journal of nervous and mental disease (1)

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    COVID-19 and Suicide: A Deadly Association

    Abi Zeid Daou, Margarita; Rached, Gaelle; Geller, Jeffrey L. (2021-05-01)
    COVID-19 hit the world amidst an unprecedented suicide epidemic in this century. As the world focuses on limiting the spread of the virus and prioritizing acutely medically ill patients, containment measures are not without mental health consequences. With rising anxiety and depression, risk of suicide-acutely and in the aftermath of the pandemic-also rises. This article aims to shed light on this major public health problem and better understand what factors may create or exacerbate psychiatric symptoms and suicide. We review suicide data predating the pandemic and examine impact of previous epidemics on suicide rates. We then focus on the current pandemic's impacts and the world's response to COVID-19. We examine how these may lead to increased suicide rates, focusing on the US population. Finally, we offer suggestions on mitigating interventions to curb the impending rise in suicide and the resultant increased burden on an already stretched health care system.
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    Impact of global and national crises on people with severe mental illness

    Abi Zeid Daou, Margarita; Halbreich, Uriel; Geller, Jeffrey L. (2020-12-16)
    As experts in disaster mental health push to reframe disaster response as a preventive medicine rather than its actual state of acute management, various factors should be considered. Although a whole population may be victim to the effects of disasters, particularly vulnerable are those with severe mental illness. Therefore, efforts geared to bolster trauma response should centre on these individuals, starting at a community level and reaching organisational and governmental endeavours and funding.
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    Patients With SMI in the Age of COVID-19: What Psychiatrists Need to Know

    Geller, Jeffrey L.; Abi Zeid Daou, Margarita (American Psychiatric Association, 2020-04-07)
    Psychiatrists taking care of people with serious mental illness (SMI) need information about changed vulnerabilities and unique treatment requirements of this population during the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as what new or changed resources are available to them.
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