However, social norms in Gaza still consider suicide to be an unacceptable social "taboo". It's something that is seen to bring shame to the victim's family due to deep-rooted religious principles.
Regardless, the circumstances leading to these incidents cannot be ignored.
"Many university graduates in Gaza never find any job opportunities that match their fields of study. Moreover, if someone does find work at all, the salaries are usually very low," says Abu Awdeh.
"Since the political split of 2007, the Palestinian Authority has been providing no work opportunities.
"Also, most available jobs in Gaza are partisan-affiliated, where each political faction solely provides its direct supporters with a limited income. Thus, most people are left alone in the face of utter poverty and unemployment," she adds.
Another kind of suicide
Abu Awdeh points out a related worrisome trend in Gaza – learning how to swim, to make a perilous escape to another country.
"Since it's so hard for them to travel through the formal border crossings of Erez with Israel or Rafah with Egypt, the alternative they think of is attempting to migrate via the Mediterranean, which is just another kind of potential suicide," she says.
Meanwhile, Abu Awdeh states that social support centres in Gaza can provide care to people in psychological distress.
However, she notes that social stigma – including being labelled "crazy" and bringing strife to their families – stops many people from seeking help.
"Even when someone consults specialists at these centres, they don't always reveal every detail (of their suffering) out of social or religious considerations. As a result, their condition often deteriorates," she says.
To help mitigate that situation, Abu Awdeh calls on Palestinian universities to support their graduates by waiving certificate fees, which most students cannot afford.
She also stresses the need to spread awareness in Gazan society about the necessity of psychiatric and psychological treatment through various programmes provided by civil society.
Abu Awdeh also calls on Friday sermon preachers to shed light on the phenomenon of suicide and the importance of caring for one's mental health, pointing out that this topic never appears in their speeches.
She emphasises the importance of this inclusion, as Gazan communities are largely influenced by religious discussions.
Social stigma
Psychiatrist Ismael Ahl tells Al Majalla that the rejection of psychiatry as a treatment method by Palestinian society is one of the most significant factors behind the recent increase in suicide rates.
"Typically speaking, a family with a suicidal member would resort to supposedly pious individuals or sorcerers and reveal the secrets of their struggling relative to them," he says.
"This reflects a mistrust towards psychiatry, which has been inherited from traditional social norms. It's something that has been reinforced by old Arab television series and films that depict both the patient and the psychiatrist as madmen.
"Therefore, due to their ignorance of the genuine role of psychiatry, most families would do anything to avoid making themselves prone to social stigma."
Ahl attributes the prevailing psychological disorders among young people in Gaza to several factors.
"Oftentimes, these young people had a difficult upbringing, witnessed domestic abuse, or had childhood traumas," he says.
"Furthermore, the persistent and challenging economic, political, and social conditions and the lack of prospects, particularly following the Palestinian political split, have worsened things.