29th European Congress of Psychiatry , Florence, İtalya, 1 - 30 Nisan 2021, cilt.64, ss.707
Introduction: After World Health Organization declared that
COVID-19 disease became a pandemic; like most, people in Turkey
were affected by the emotionally challenging atmosphere. Previous
outbreaks negatively effected mental health, increased suicide
attempts and completed suicides.
Objectives: Our study aimed to investigate psychiatry consultations
from emergency service in a university hospital, to determine
differencies in pandemia.
Methods: We conducted a monocenter retrospective study by
examining the patients who applied to emergency servise and
consulted to psychiatry department in three periods: between
11 March- 11 July, in 2018, 2019, and 2020. Patient’s sociodemographic
and clinical variables were assessed.
Results:
There were no difference in distributions of applicants’ following
variables between periods; age, sex, marital status, experiencing a
first attack or an exacerbation, or outcome treatment. Among
applicants with suicide attempts, there were no difference between
periods in terms of the presence of recurrent suicide attempt (χ² =
0.297 p = 0.862). While emergency admissions with behavioral
disorders increased, admissions with depressive symptoms
decreased. Admissions with suicide attempts were statistically significantly
higher in 2020 (Table 1). Recommendation of psychiatric
inpatient treatment did not change between periods, while refusal
of hospitalization recommendation decreased (Table 2).
Conclusions: In our sample, emergency psychiatry admissions
with behaviour disorders and suicide attempts increased in pandemic
period.