Suicidology during the Pandemic (US)
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(and a quick lesson in visualization)
Suicide rates decreased significantly when the pandemic started, and remained lower than 2019 for the remainder of the year. This is the monthly breakdown.
This is the best way to visualize yearly changes, and media types/communication types, please take note. This graph contains all of the necessary information to put a yearly change into context.
This graph is my invention, called the "GETH"
Why is it the best, you ask? /2
FIRST: it standardizes each month and year to "per 100,000 per year". Populations change over time and months have 28-31 days. This variation matters and without controlling, introduces error. /3
SECOND: it shows the historical context. the years prior to the previous year are in grey, and the most recent year is more prominent and highlighted in blue. /4
THIRD: it shows error bars for the "target year" (2020). Error bars are not necessary for the fact, but they ARE necessary to determine whether or not a change is outside of expectations. See how clearly April and May are lower than previous years? /5
By combining all these things together, you can get a sense of year-on-year change, as well as the historical context, as well as the variation one would expect. /6
The GETH is also useful for subgroups.
Here we can see the 2020 changes for Men in the United States. April was significantly lower, and every month following was either lower than or the same as 2019. /7
Women fared even better, with many of the months being lower (and 5 significantly so) than previous years. /8
Unless you're a real estate board trying to pump your industry, you should always include:
1) population & time adjustment
(not just "# of deaths")
2) historical information for context
(not just year-over-year change)
3) uncertainty measure (i use 95% CI for proportion) /9
The GETH does all of that, and in one graph, you can convey all of the information necessary to understand the larger picture.
Be a good science communicator! Follow these principles. /10
(and yes, by the way, GETH is inspired by @masseffect, because I am a geek. To make the acronym work, it's short for "Graphical Envisioning of Temporal Happenstances", because it can be used for any time frame and any occurrence, not just suicide)
Full Subgroup Analysis, US Suicides 2020
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2020's effect on suicide can now be analysed thanks to @CDCgov at the yearly level. Very shortly I'll be able to look monthly as well.
This is the whole US population, but we can now do subgroups. /1
The big headline: Children 10-14 did NOT have a significant increase in suicides. It was well within expected rate variability. Error bars shown.
Because of small #'s, the rate changes can be drastic.
The 2020 increase was less than '00, '04, '07, '09, '13, '14, '17 and '18 /2
In other words, no evidence that the "lockdown" phase of the pandemic caused more child suicides, and no evidence that 2020 was associated with a significant increase in child suicides. /3
This is one of the true issues of COVID when it comes to preventing transmission/reducing spread, and protecting children. Eggheads & doofuses will focus on how "rare" it is for kids to die (tho its a leading cause of death in kids), but so many children have suffered d/t COVID.
Doofus: "0.00x% of kids die" - there are other issues with COVID spreading through a community that severely harm children
Egghead: "masks stop kids from reading facial expressions, and being out of school could cause problems" - how about losing a parent to preventable disease
Every human who can be vaccinated should be vaccinated, and we should be doing everything we can to prevent the preventable deaths and illnesses that occur due to COVID. This has *always* been the answer to "how can we help our kids the most?"
A Very Grim Milestone:
As of today, 1:1500 people **worldwide** have died due to COVID-19.
This ranks COVID-19 between #4-6 in cause of death in the world, over the past 22 months.
/1
Of course, the world is a big place.
COVID stats:
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Peru: 1 in 167 dead
Brazil: 1 in 350 dead
USA: 1 in 418 dead
UK: 1 in 475 dead
Sweden: 1 in 675 dead
Germany: 1 in 846 dead
Canada: 1 in 1,295 dead
Australia: 1 in 13,369 dead
New Zealand: 1 in 128,205 dead
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Remember, this isn't infection mortality (the chance of dying if you get COVID), this is POPULATION mortality. 0.067% of the population doesn't sound like a lot, but its far higher than suicide worldwide (#10 cause of death, 0.019% Population Fatality Rate in 22 months).
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Suicide rates in 2020 in the US are now available via @CDCgov BY AGE.
No significant change in youth groups, decreased in older ages past expected levels.
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By racial categories, for men there was variation but the trend of "white and Asian down, Black, Hispanic, and Indigenous" was present. Due to size of the groups the Indigenous men increase is within variance.
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In female suicides all groups saw a decrease, but only white women had a drop outside variance.
Women fared better than men for suicide in absolute terms (men outnumber women 4:1 this year), but also relatively (women down 8.3%, men down (2.2%)
While the "serotonin hypothesis" of depression is no longer taught, #SSRIs delay the reuptake of serotonin @ neurotransmitters. We also now know they have a host of other effects (σ1, BDNF, CREB, cytokines, on top of a slew of differences on the various subtypes of serotonin)
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The key difference, is that today, we know that the brain changes seen in depression are impairing, and we know that SSRIs work. Instead of drawing a straight line between "serotonin regulation" and efficacy, the honest psychiatrist doesn't understand the current mechanism.
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We now suspect that there are a host of effects, second, third, & even tertiary effects, and the complex way in which the brain is interconnected plays a role.
But yes, SSRIs DO block the reuptake of serotonin. It's why we have to be careful about withdrawal and tolerance.
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Thank you so much everyone for sharing your experiences. I have to mute notifications now due to virality but I've done my best to read and hear all of you. I'm glad my message resonated with so many. and pretty much 90% of disagreement/exception was respectful.
Honestly I'm touched, sometimes i feel this place is all about fights but most got what I was saying and shared so much about the *why* I've said it. If you ever want to see a "reaffirming ratio" look at that thread.
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I understand why parents feel scared and worried about the world and why it seems like intruding on their privacy is safe, but please read the responses and all of the hardship, hurt, and fractured relationships that were caused by such behavior.
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