Abstract
BACKGROUND
Little is known about the COVID-19 pandemic impact on child and adolescent mental health, specifically self-harm. This paper serves to form a basis for understanding and planning an appropriate response to the present and longstanding child and adolescent mental health needs with global recommendations for integrated community support and disaster preparedness.
METHODS
Anonymous, aggregated data from an established regional child and adolescent addictions and mental health service was employed to examine differences in the rates of self-harm as the primary reason for referral among the health-seeking population represented by quarter by year since 2010 to examine whether self-harm rates have increased since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
RESULTS
Female rates of self-harm referral were greater than male rates. Neither male nor female quarterly rates of total or first-time self-harm referrals exceeded the highest quarterly rates since 2010.
DISCUSSION
Since the COVID-19 pandemic, self-harm rates in one Canadian region remain stable and lower than the highest rates observed over the last decade. Given misplaced alarmist news and reports, a coherent, evidence-based, dynamic national response to mental health, social support, and disaster planning is required to fully understand how best to respond to the pandemic in general with a sustainable social support and disaster preparedness policy strategy and specifically the ongoing and pandemic-related mental health needs of the child and adolescent help-seeking population.
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