Kaveladze Benjamin, Chang Katherine, Siev Jedidiah, Schueller Stephen M
Department of Psychological Science, University of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States.
Department of Psychology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, PA, United States.
JMIR Ment Health. 2021 Feb 17;8(2):e26715. doi: 10.2196/26715.
People with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) have faced unique challenges during the COVID-19 pandemic. Research from the first two months of the pandemic suggests that a small proportion of people with OCD experienced worsening in their OCD symptoms since the pandemic began, whereas the rest experienced either no change or an improvement in their symptoms. However, as society-level factors relating to the pandemic have evolved, the effects of the pandemic on people with OCD have likely changed as well, in complex and population-specific ways. Therefore, this study contributes to a growing body of knowledge on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on people and demonstrates how differences across studies might emerge when studying specific populations at specific timepoints.
This study aimed to assess how members of online OCD support communities felt the COVID-19 pandemic had affected their OCD symptoms, around 3 months after the pandemic began.
We recruited participants from online OCD support communities for our brief survey. Participants indicated how much they felt their OCD symptoms had changed since the pandemic began and how much they felt that having OCD was making it harder to deal with the pandemic.
We collected survey data from June through August 2020 and received a total of 196 responses, some of which were partial responses. Among the nonmissing data, 65.9% (108/164) of the participants were from the United States and 90.5% (152/168) had been subjected to a stay-at-home order. In all, 92.9% (182/196) of the participants said they experienced worsening of their OCD symptoms since the pandemic began, although the extent to which their symptoms worsened differed across dimensions of OCD; notably, symmetry and completeness symptoms were less likely to have worsened than others. Moreover, 95.5% (171/179) of the participants felt that having OCD made it difficult to deal with the pandemic.
Our study of online OCD support community members found a much higher rate of OCD symptom worsening than did other studies on people with OCD conducted during the current COVID-19 pandemic. Factors such as quarantine length, location, overlapping society-level challenges, and differing measurement and sampling choices may help to explain this difference across studies.
强迫症(OCD)患者在新冠疫情期间面临着独特的挑战。疫情头两个月的研究表明,一小部分强迫症患者自疫情开始以来强迫症症状有所恶化,而其余患者症状要么没有变化,要么有所改善。然而,随着与疫情相关的社会层面因素不断演变,疫情对强迫症患者的影响可能也已发生变化,且方式复杂且因人群而异。因此,本研究有助于丰富关于新冠疫情对人们影响的知识体系,并展示在特定时间点研究特定人群时不同研究结果可能出现差异的情况。
本研究旨在评估疫情开始约3个月后,在线强迫症支持社区成员认为新冠疫情对其强迫症症状产生了怎样的影响。
我们从在线强迫症支持社区招募参与者进行简短调查。参与者指出自疫情开始以来他们感觉自己的强迫症症状有多大变化,以及他们感觉患有强迫症对应对疫情造成了多大困难。
我们在2020年6月至8月期间收集了调查数据,共收到196份回复,其中一些是部分回复。在无缺失数据中,65.9%(108/164)的参与者来自美国,90.5%(152/168)的参与者受到了居家令的限制。总体而言,92.9%(182/196)的参与者表示自疫情开始以来他们的强迫症症状有所恶化,尽管症状恶化的程度在强迫症的不同维度上有所不同;值得注意的是,对称和完整症状比其他症状恶化的可能性更小。此外,95.5%(171/179)的参与者感觉患有强迫症使其难以应对疫情。
我们对在线强迫症支持社区成员的研究发现,与当前新冠疫情期间对强迫症患者进行的其他研究相比,强迫症症状恶化的比例要高得多。隔离时长、地点、重叠的社会层面挑战以及不同的测量和抽样选择等因素可能有助于解释不同研究结果之间的这种差异。