key: cord-0829369-hi1gnk2a authors: Valença, Alexandre M.; Telles, Lisieux E.; da Silva, Antônio G.; Barros, Alcina J. title: The increasing risk of domestic violence, including parricide, during the COVID-19 pandemic: reflections and recommendations date: 2021-05-10 journal: Braz J Psychiatry DOI: 10.1590/1516-4446-2021-1896 sha: 8d6fb5d555c6917db44be12c7bb8a4453dadf0ef doc_id: 829369 cord_uid: hi1gnk2a nan Domestic violence must be considered one of the serious public health consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. 1 In this context, the risk of parricide should be discussed, the extreme rarity of this crime notwithstanding. Parricide consists of the act of killing one's own father (patricide), mother (matricide), foster parents, or adoptive parents. 2 Abnormal family relationships (which can be extremely severe or overly protective) or psychiatric problems (such as schizophrenia and dependent personality disorder) are more often found in parricides than in other criminal offenders. Evidence suggests that positive symptoms in the context of psychotic illness, such as delusions and hallucinations, 3, 4 are related to violent behavior, and that paranoid delusions were the most common symptom associated with parricide in schizophrenic patients. The risk of this specific crime increases if an underlying psychiatric disorder has not been properly treated. 2 It is important to stress that the majority of mentally ill patients, including severe cases, are neither dangerous nor a threat to others, and that persons with mental illness are responsible for only a small proportion of violent crimes. 5 The emergence of negative feelings such as impotence, frustration, and agitation 6 can lead to aggression and crimes within the household during this pandemic. When a psychotic patient commits a crime, non-adherence with medications, poor insight, and alcohol or drug abuse are usually found, and the victim is commonly a family member. 3 Since the dynamic interaction of social and contextual factors with clinical variables is an important determinant of violent behavior, 5 the current global health crisis related to the coronavirus pandemic and its consequences of prolonged home confinement and fewer opportunities for face-to-face psychiatric assessment must be considered. Brazil has been affected by the COVID-19 pandemic to an alarming extent, with almost 12 million cases and 300,000 deaths as of the time of writing. 7 People with preexisting psychiatric disorders or substance use problems are at increased risk for adverse psychosocial outcomes during pandemics. Social distancing, sheltering-in-place, restricted travel, closures of key community establishments, reduced access to mental health services and psychopharmaceuticals, harmful use of alcohol and drugs, and intensification of family conflicts during this crisis may all lead to psychotic outbreaks or worsening of preexisting psychotic symptoms in certain patients, potentially culminating in violent behavior -including parricide. Previous aggressions directed to family members usually occur before parricide, and the aggressor may commonly attempt suicide after the crime, requiring that mental health professionals keep an attentive technical listening and take the necessary measures to protect all the involved ones. Checking carefully for violent ideation and behavior in high-risk patients is essential, as these have predictive value for conversion to psychosis and likelihood of violence in the future. Patients at elevated risk for violence might benefit from closer monitoring by mental health professionals and rapid-treatment interventions. If faceto-face assessment of the patient is not possible, the mental health team should use all available technological resources, such as teleconsultations or regular phone calls to the patient or his/her reference family. A longitudinal study of violent behavior in a psychosis-risk cohort Is parricide a stable phenomenon? An analysis of parricide offenders in a forensic hospital Violence and mental illness: what is the true story Danger in danger: interpersonal violence during COVID-19 quarantine Coronavirus population