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Calls to the anti-violence number in Italy during COVID-19 pandemic: correlation and trend analyses of violence reports during 2020

TLDR
In this article , a positive correlation was found between daily deaths due to COVID-19 and the number of calls to the anti-violence number, while daily hospitalizations and admissions in ICU negatively correlated with calls of women reporting at the national anti violence number.
Abstract
Abstract Purpose We hypothesized that during the 2020 pandemic there has been a significant change along the year, depending on the SARS-CoV-2 impact on the population and varying difficulties implied in the norms that were adopted to embank the pandemic. Our objectives were to verify how the phenomenon of domestic violence has evolved and changed along 2020, and to clarify if these changes were correlated to the evolution of the pandemic. Methods Though the analysis of the number of daily calls from women to the national anti-violence number and the parameters related to COVID-19 pandemic (daily cases, deaths, hospitalizations, and admissions in ICU), a positive correlation was found between daily deaths due to COVID-19 and the number of calls to the anti-violence number, while daily hospitalizations and admissions in ICU negatively correlated with calls of women reporting at the national anti-violence number. Results The number of daily calls from women reporting at the national anti-violence number positively correlated with the number of quarantined people shifted of 30 days from the beginning of isolation at home, as well. We also analyzed temporal trends of daily calls from women to the national anti-violence number from 25th of February 2020 to 31st of December 2020. Conclusions These findings demonstrate the importance of an active anti-violence telephone service and may help in developing a strategy to improve anti-violence facilities, especially during crises, such as specific sources of psychological support for women who have survived violence episodes.

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When COVID-19 Is Not All: Femicide Conducted by a Murderer with a Narcissistic Personality “Masked” by a Brief Psychotic Disorder, with a Mini-Review

TL;DR: In a case of femicide that occurred in Italy during the first phase of the pandemic, coinciding with a national lockdown, a discrepancy arose among forensic psychiatry experts, particularly toward the diagnosis of Brief Psychotic Disorder (BPD) related to COVID-19 as discussed by the authors .
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How Did the COVID-19 Pandemic Increase Salience of Intimate Partner Violence on the Policy Agenda?

TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the processes that have led to increasing political attention to domestic violence in Belgium and analyzed the agenda-setting process in its complexity and the COVID-19 pandemic as a policy window.
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Mental Health and the COVID-19 Pandemic: Observational Evidence from Malaysia

TL;DR: In this paper , a large-scale study was conducted to assess the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the general population in Malaysia and found that prolonged lockdowns had significantly impacted the mental health of the population, reducing quality of life.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Permutation tests for joinpoint regression with applications to cancer rates

TL;DR: A joinpoint regression model is applied to describe continuous changes in the recent trend and the grid-search method is used to fit the regression function with unknown joinpoints assuming constant variance and uncorrelated errors.
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Prevalence of intimate partner violence: findings from the WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence

TL;DR: The findings confirm that physical and sexual partner violence against women is widespread and the variation in prevalence within and between settings highlights that this violence in not inevitable, and must be addressed.
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Prevalence of mental health problems during the COVID-19 pandemic: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: A meta-analysis to assess the prevalence of depression, anxiety, distress, and insomnia during the COVID-19 pandemic found that the general population and non-medical staff had a lower risk of distress than other populations, and Physicians, nurses, and non -medical staff showed a higher prevalence of insomnia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating average annual per cent change in trend analysis

TL;DR: The average annual per cent change (AAPC) is proposed, which uses sAPCs to summarize and compare trends for a specific time period and takes into account the trend transitions, whereas cAPC does not and can lead to erroneous conclusions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of COVID -19 on children: special focus on the psychosocial aspect.

TL;DR: Parents, pediatricians, psychologists, social workers, hospital authorities, government and non-governmental organizations have important roles to play to mitigate the psychosocial ill-effects of COVID-19 on children and adolescents.
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