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Thread: The societal impacts of COVID-19

  1. #76
    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
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    The next COVID crisis could be a wave of suicides

    NEW YORK — The isolation, grief and economic hardship related to COVID-19 are creating a mental health crisis in the U.S. that researchers warn could make the already-rising suicide rate worse.

    A study released Friday tried to quantify the toll. The paper, which was not peer-reviewed, found that over the next decade as many as 75,000 additional people could die from “deaths of despair” as a result of the coronavirus crisis, a term that refers to suicides and substance-abuse-related deaths. The research was done by the Well Being Trust and researchers affiliated with the American Academy of Family Physicians.

    “I hope in 10 years people look back and say, ‘Wow, they way overestimated it,’” said John Westfall, director of the Robert Graham Center for Policy Studies in Family Medicine and Primary Care, who co-wrote the report.

    Even as the American economy rebounded after the last recession, suicides and overdoses cut into Americans’ life expectancy. Mental health experts worry that the economic uncertainty and social isolation of the pandemic will make things worse at a time when the healthcare system is already overwhelmed. The suicide rate in the U.S. has been rising for two decades, and in 2018 hit its highest level since 1941, according to a viewpoint piece in JAMA Psychiatry in April called “Suicide Mortality and Coronavirus Disease 2019 — A Perfect Storm?” Author Mark Reger argued social distancing could hamper suicide prevention efforts and said ensuring that doesn’t happen is a “national public health priority.”

    “There’s a paradox,” said Jeffrey Reynolds, president of a Long Island-based nonprofit social services agency, the Family and Children’s Association. “Social isolation protects us from a contagious, life-threatening virus, but at the same time it puts people at risk for things that are the biggest killers in the United States: suicide, overdose and diseases related to alcohol abuse.”

    Since the middle of March, the number of people filing for unemployment benefits has reached around 33 million. Americans’ life satisfaction has eroded rapidly throughout that same period, according to a poll released Friday by Gallup. The percentage of U.S. adults who are very content with their current lives and optimistic about their future outlook has dropped to a low not seen since November 2008 during the Great Recession, showed the analysis of more than 4,000 surveys.

    “One of the main things people should take away from this paper is that employment matters,” said Benjamin Miller, chief strategy officer at the Well Being Trust and a clinical psychologist who worked on the paper. “It matters for our economic livelihood, and for our mental and emotional health.”

    The financial uncertainty caused by the coronavirus pandemic, coupled with the pervasive sense of isolation exacerbated by stay-at-home orders, makes this moment unprecedented — different from any other economic downturn in recent history — and thus, potentially difficult to model based on past events.

    “It’s useful to have a wake-up call,” said Ken Duckworth, chief medical officer at the National Alliance on Mental Illness. “Unemployment is going to have a very important impact on deaths of despair.”

    Already data are showing lower-income Americans are more affected by coronavirus-related stress than their wealthier counterparts: A Kaiser Family Foundation study that showed 26% of people making less than $40,000 a year said the virus had a “major negative impact” on their mental health; only 14% of people making $90,000 or more a year said the same held true for them.

    Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health started measuring “mental distress” starting in March drawing on studies from the SARS epidemic of 2003. Early in the month, hotspots like California, Washington, New York and Massachusetts reported mental distress “significantly increased” — even when adjusting for variables like age and income. Distress was higher among people who used alcohol or marijuana more frequently in the past week or who’d consumed more media or social media. It was also higher in younger people, perhaps surprising given that COVID-19 is more lethal for older people.

    New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said his state is seeing a rise in drug use, alcohol consumption and domestic violence. “It has caused serious mental health issues,” he said in a public briefing last week. He encouraged New Yorkers to take advantage of a hotline set up for those in emotional distress. Meanwhile, on the national level, the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration reported an 891% increase in calls to its Disaster Distress Hotline in March compared with a year earlier.

    “We’ve seen from past work that policies play a really important role in shaping people’s experience and well-being,” Julia Raifman, assistant professor of health law at Boston University School of Public Health, said. New York, for example, asked psychologists and psychiatrists to volunteer to provide some free mental healthcare, which she said was a positive step. “I hope we’ll see other states start to do that. I think there’s a lot of room for innovation here.” States that had more generous unemployment benefits during the last recession saw fewer suicides, Raifman said.

    Miller’s paper this week proposes long-term solutions like helping unemployed people find meaningful work or training the armies of contact tracers who will be sent out into communities to identify people at risk of a mental health crisis. He sees building up community-based mental healthcare services as a way to serve more people in need. Congress granted $425 million for mental health and substance use disorder initiatives in the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, or CARES, but Miller called that “almost an embarrassment” considering airlines got $25 billion in aid. “We are not taking this seriously as a nation,” he said.
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

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  3. #77
    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
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    The next big question. How do families decide when their at-risk members can resume active life? How do we tell Mom it's okay to socialize and venture out?

    We can talk about stages and thresholds all we want. That doesn't answer the very personal and anxiety-riddled decision of when to say it's okay for our own family members.
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

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  5. #78
    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
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    I'm trying to reach out to a coworker who is off dealing with both parents testing positive and elderly. The measured responses have me think he's not doing well.
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

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  7. #79
    #DeSantis2024 Teh One Who Knocks's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by RBP View Post
    The next big question. How do families decide when their at-risk members can resume active life? How do we tell Mom it's okay to socialize and venture out?

    We can talk about stages and thresholds all we want. That doesn't answer the very personal and anxiety-riddled decision of when to say it's okay for our own family members.
    That's a hard question with no real answers. It will be different for everyone and ever family. If you're elderly yet fairly healthy, does that mean it's safer for you to venture out? Unless a vaccine is developed, will it be to the point that if you are elderly and suffering from other health complications, you will never be safe to venture out? I guess everyone will need to examine how averse they are to the risks.

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    Shelter Dweller lost in melb.'s Avatar
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    I did a slight cough at the supermarket behind plexiglass yesterday. The cashier looked at me like she was going to murder me

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    Mr Magoo RBP's Avatar
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    I talked to a psychologist in a small private practice. They've done 8 hospitalizations via video in the last 3 weeks. That is usually a year.
    I wanted to be a Monk, but I never got the chants.

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    #DeSantis2024 Teh One Who Knocks's Avatar
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    California suspects arrested after brawling with Target employees over refusal to wear masks: police

    By David Aaro | Fox News




    Two men in California were arrested after brawling and breaking the arm of a Target employee who confronted them for not wearing masks during the coronavirus pandemic, according to police on Monday.

    Phillip Hamilton, 31, and Paul Hamilton, 29, entered the Los Angeles retail store around 10:20 a.m. on May 1, without masks on, police said. Video of the incident allegedly shows them being escorted out by employees after they refused to wear the protective gear.

    "As they approached the exit, one suspect, suddenly without provocation, turned and punched a store employee, causing him and the suspect to fall to the floor," according to the Los Angeles Police Department. "While on the ground, the store employee broke his left arm. A fight erupted between the two suspects and store employees."

    After hitting the first security guard, the other was allegedly seen using his elbows to strike another employee who grabbed him in a bear hug, causing them both to fall to the ground. Several customers appear to step in to help towards the end of the video.

    Paramedics transported the injured store employee to a local hospital where he was treated for his injuries, police said.

    Target provided a statement to CBSLA on Monday.

    "An unfortunate altercation occurred following a request from our team members that two guests at our Van Nuys store comply with the city order to wear face coverings while shopping," the company said. "We’re grateful for the support of local police and we’ll provide any information that can be helpful to their investigation.”

    The two suspects were arrested the same day for felony battery, police said. Their bail was set at $50,000 bail but they were released from custody on May 5, according to jail records.

    Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti issued an emergency order in April that requires workers who provide non-medical essential services, and customers of these businesses, to wear face coverings while at work.

    “We need to protect every worker on the front lines of this crisis,” Garcetti said. “Each one of us is a first responder in this emergency. Every employer should keep employees safe, and so should Angelenos patronizing these businesses. Cover up. Keep your distance. Save lives. It’s that simple.”

    A similar order was issued by Los Angeles County officials. It took effect on April 15.

    It's not clear if the two suspects were related.


    ================================================== =====================

    There are more and more of these confrontations happening.

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    Shelter Dweller lost in melb.'s Avatar
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    Production Club, a design studio in Los Angeles, has come up with a prototype for a personal protective suit tailored to concertgoers.
    Micrashell not only looks like a cyberpunk dream, but it also features some handy specs from a ventilation system, including the option to "mute" people in real life and a drinking design that ensures nobody can tamper with your drink.

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    aka TheInvisibleMan Griffin's Avatar
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    Nothing new there.The Power Rangers have had those suits for over 25 years.

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    Shelter Dweller lost in melb.'s Avatar
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    I must admit I like the ability to mute people

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    I'm not smart enough to know how to use the mention feature but I'd love RBP to have a read of this:

    https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...e_iOSApp_Other

    Japan suicides decline as Covid-19 lockdown causes shift in stress factors

    The suicide rate in Japan fell by 20% in April compared with the same time last year, the biggest drop in five years, despite fears the coronavirus pandemic would cause increased stress and many prevention helplines were either not operating or short-staffed.

    People spending more time at home with their families, fewer people were commuting to work and delays to the start of the school year are seen as factors in the fall.

    In April, 1,455 people took their lives in Japan, 359 fewer than in April 2019. Suicide has been on a downward trend in Japan since peaking at more than 34,000 cases annually in 2003. Last year saw just over 20,000, and the large drop last month came at a time when there were fears of a fresh spike.
    Tokyo's state of emergency – in pictures

    New coronavirus infections reached their peak in mid-April in Japan at more than 500 a day, leading the government to declare a state of emergency on 16 April, though the restrictions were less strict than those of other countries.

    The stay-at-home measures affected suicide prevention organisations, with about 40% of them either shut down or working reduced hours, leading to worries about vulnerable people.

    Amid the decline in suicide of recent years, there has been an increase among children, with bullying and other problems at school a frequently cited cause. The start of the academic year, in April in Japan, is a particularly stressful time for some, but its postponement due to the pandemic may have saved lives, at least temporarily.

    “School is a pressure for some young people, but this April there is no such pressure,” said Yukio Saito, a former head of telephone counselling service the Japanese Federation of Inochi-no-Denwa. “At home with their families, they feel safe.”

    As for adults, at times of national crisis and disasters, “traditionally, people don’t think about suicide”, said Saito, pointing to a drop in cases in 2011, the year of the giant earthquake, tsunami and nuclear meltdowns at Fukushima.

    . A large drop in the number of people commuting to offices, where they often work long hours, is also being seen as another contributing factor in the lower suicide rate.

    However, economic and work pressures are factors. The year after the 1997 Asian financial crisis saw a record rise of nearly 35%. A prolonged economic downturn caused by the pandemic could lead to a rebound in cases, said Saito, who also served as chair of the Japanese Association for Suicide Prevention.
    Japan is an strange place, I don't pretend to know what to make of this at all but it sounds like normal workplace pressures in Japan are off the charts.

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