The first COVID-19 infanticide-suicide case: Financial crisis and fear of COVID-19 infection are the causative factors

Asian J Psychiatr. 2020 Dec:54:102365. doi: 10.1016/j.ajp.2020.102365. Epub 2020 Aug 28.

Abstract

Background: The global suicide occurrences have been aggravated because of COVID-19 crisis-related issues such as fear of infection, the financial crisis, being infected with COVID-19, loneliness, social boycott, etc. Although two studies reported about the seven dyadic suicidality cases (i.e., suicide pacts), child homicide-suicide has not been studied.

Case presentation: On 14 May, two dead bodies (i.e., a 30-years old Indian woman and her six-month-old baby) were found in a Riyadh apartment complex. The perpetrator (a person who kills the others and later commits suicide) - a trained nurse, was in search of a job. The woman's husband was recently retrenched from his technician job at a company in Madinah Airport. Her husband was admitted to a hospital with symptoms related to the COVID-19 infection four days before the suicide incidence. The 70-year-old mother-in-law alerted the neighbors after finding that the apartment is locked from inside and there was no response on knocking the doors. After this, the neighbors gathered and called the police. Police found two dead-bodies after opening the flat and suspected that the child was killed before the woman committed suicide.

Conclusions: Based on the present findings, further child filicide-suicide possibilities in families with economically distressed and/or positive COVID-19 status are expected. Hence, proper financial supports, providing authentic information (COVID-19), and mental health promotional strategies are suggested for decreasing incidences of COVID-19 related infanticide-suicide cases.

Keywords: COVID-19 economic crisis and suicide; COVID-19 suicide; Child homicide-suicide; Fear of COVID-19 infection; Homicide-suicide; Infanticide-suicide.

Publication types

  • Case Reports
  • Letter

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • COVID-19 / psychology*
  • Fear / psychology*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Infanticide / psychology*
  • Pandemics
  • Suicide / psychology*