Home > Increases in ‘deaths of despair’ during the COVID-19 pandemic in the USA and UK.

Angus, Colin and Buckley, Charlotte and Tilstra, Andrea M and Dowd, Jennifer B (2023) Increases in ‘deaths of despair’ during the COVID-19 pandemic in the USA and UK. Public Health, 218, pp. 92-96. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.puhe.2023.02.019.

External website: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/...


Objectives: The COVID-19 pandemic significantly impacted mental health, health-related behaviours such as drinking and illicit drug use, and the accessibility of health and social care services. How these pandemic shocks affected “despair”-related mortality in different countries is less clear. This study uses public data to compare deaths from alcohol, drugs and suicide in the USA and UK to identify similarities or differences in the impact of the pandemic on important non-COVID causes of death across countries and to consider the public health implications of these trends.

Study design and methods: Data was taken from publicly available mortality figures for England & Wales, Northern Ireland, Scotland and the United States of America 2001-2021 and analysed descriptively through age-standardised and age-specific mortality rates from suicide, alcohol and drug use.

Results: Alcohol-specific deaths increased in all countries between 2019 and 2021, most notably in the USA and, to a lesser extent, England & Wales. Suicide rates did not increase markedly during the pandemic in any of the included nations. Drug-related mortality rates rose dramatically over the same period in the USA but not in other nations.

Conclusions: Mortality from ‘deaths of despair’ during the pandemic has displayed divergent trends between causes and countries. Concerns about increases in deaths by suicide appear to have been unfounded, while deaths due to alcohol have risen across the UK and in the USA and across almost all age groups. Scotland and the USA had similarly high levels of drug-related deaths pre-pandemic, but the differing trends during the pandemic highlight the different underlying causes of these drug death epidemics and the importance of tailoring policy responses to these specific contexts.

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