Japan suicides decline as Covid-19 lockdown causes shift in stress factors

The suicide rate in Japan fell by 20% in April
compared with the same time last year, the biggest drop in five years, despite
fears the coronavirus pandemic would cause increased stress and many prevention
helplines were either not operating or short-staffed.
People spending more time at home with their
families, fewer people were commuting to work and delays to the start of the
school year are seen as factors in the fall.
In April, 1,455 people took their lives in Japan,
359 fewer than in April 2019. Suicide has been on a downward trend in Japan
since peaking at more than 34,000 cases annually in 2003. Last year saw just
over 20,000, and the large drop last month came at a time when there were fears
of a fresh spike.
New coronavirus infections reached their peak in
mid-April in Japan at more than 500 a day, leading the government to declare a
state of emergency on 16 April, though the restrictions were less strict than
those of other countries.
The stay-at-home measures affected suicide
prevention organisations, with about 40% of them either shut down or working
reduced hours, leading to worries about vulnerable people.
Amid the decline in suicide of recent years, there
has been an increase among children, with bullying and other problems at school
a frequently cited cause. The start of the academic year, in April in Japan, is
a particularly stressful time for some, but its postponement due to the
pandemic may have saved lives, at least temporarily.
“School is a pressure for some young people, but
this April there is no such pressure,” said Yukio Saito, a former head of
telephone counselling service the Japanese Federation of Inochi-no-Denwa. “At
home with their families, they feel safe.”
As for adults, at times of national crisis and
disasters, “traditionally, people don’t think about suicide”, said Saito,
pointing to a drop in cases in 2011, the year of the giant earthquake, tsunami
and nuclear meltdowns at Fukushima.
A large drop in the number of people commuting to
offices, where they often work long hours, is also being seen as another
contributing factor in the lower suicide rate.
However, economic and work pressures are factors.
The year after the 1997 Asian financial crisis saw a record rise of nearly 35%.
A prolonged economic downturn caused by the pandemic could lead to a rebound in
cases, said Saito, who also served as chair of the Japanese Association for
Suicide Prevention.