Suicide is a global health issue that needs to be addressed. The COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in an increased mental health burden. Stigma has obstructed efforts to prevent suicide as individuals who need urgent support do not seek appropriate help. The influence of stigma is likely to grow in tandem with the COVID-19 pandemic. The stigmatization of persons with mental illnesses is widespread worldwide, and it has substantial effects on both the individual and society. Our viewpoints aim to address the probable link between stigma and suicide in the wake of the current pandemic and propose ideas for reducing suicide-related stigma.
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a treatment of undisputed efficacy for severe and treatment-resistant psychiatric disorders. Notwithstanding extensive data on efficacy and safety, it is significantly underused, corresponding to one of the most stigmatized approaches in psychiatry. The list of problems for which ECT is potentially effective does not include obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), resulting in only a few available case reports in the literature in which OCD is the target of this specific therapeutic strategy. The authors describe a patient with refractory OCD for whom ECT was prescribed, with remarkable clinical response and functional improvement. The existence of a clear response to ECT in reported cases of OCD, albeit in a globally small number of patients, should make it essential to identify predictors of ECT response that could assist clinicians in assessing and guiding such cases, particularly those labeled as refractory to treatment.
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