Examining the Effects of COVID-19 on Suicide Attempts in Budapest: A Focus on Violent and Non-Violent Attempts
M. Bérdi, N. Hajduska-Dér, B. Sebők, N. Szeifert, L. Bálint, S. Szilágyi

TL;DR
This study examines how the number of suicide attempts in Budapest changed during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic, comparing violent and non-violent methods.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the gender-specific trends of suicide attempts in Hungary during the pandemic, linking them to healthcare concerns and behavioral changes.
Findings
Male non-violent suicide attempts decreased by 16.6% during the pandemic compared to pre-epidemic trends.
The total number of violent suicide attempts increased significantly during the first two years of the pandemic.
The decrease in non-violent attempts reversed by August 2020 for females and October 2020 for males.
Abstract
In Hungary, in contrast to most other countries, suicide deaths increased significantly during the first year of the COVID-19 epidemic (March to December 2020). Globally, the burden of emergency care in the healthcare system tended to decrease during the first period of the epidemic. Our research aimed to evaluate the changes in the number of intentional suicide attempts by violent and non-violent means during the first two years of the epidemic, compared to the trend before March 2020 in the Budapest metropolitan area and Pest County. We analyzed psychiatric assessment reports of self-poisoning patients admitted to Péterfy Hospital’s Emergency Department and Clinical Toxicology from Jan 2019 to Dec 2021 to estimate non-violent suicide attempt trends. We analyzed patient data for violent suicide attempts treated at Dr. Manninger Jenő Trauma Centre from 2016-2021, focusing on trends…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies
