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Anxiety and Suicidality in a Hospitalized Patient with COVID-19 Infection

Danny Epstein, Wisam Andrawis, Ari M. Lipsky, Hiba Abu Ziad, Moshe Matan

2020European Journal of Case Reports in Internal Medicine66 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We describe the case of a young man admitted due to mild COVID-19 infection. During his hospitalization in an isolation ward, he had no respiratory distress or fever but developed symptoms consistent with anxiety and insomnia. Despite the appropriate supportive intervention, on hospital day 7, he attempted suicide by jumping from the third-floor ward. The patient underwent urgent surgery and was transferred to a level I trauma center under strict isolation. Our findings emphasize the importance of the mental health aspects of patients treated during the COVID-19 pandemic. LEARNING POINTS: The COVID-19 pandemic requires social distancing, quarantine and isolation, which may precipitate new psychiatric symptoms in people without mental illness or aggravate existing conditions.Mental health service providers, including psychiatrists, clinical psychologists and social workers, should be available in every facility taking care of COVID-19 patients.Health workers treating patients during the COVID-19 pandemic should be aware of symptoms of depression, anxiety, insomnia and/or distress developing in their patients and colleagues.

Topics & Concepts

Isolation (microbiology)MedicineAnxietyDepression (economics)Mental healthSocial isolationSocial distanceDistressPsychiatryPandemicIntervention (counseling)Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Clinical psychologyDiseaseInternal medicineBiologyEconomicsMacroeconomicsMicrobiologyInfectious disease (medical specialty)Long-Term Effects of COVID-19COVID-19 and Mental HealthPharmacological Receptor Mechanisms and Effects
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