Al-Jabi Samah W
Department of Clinical and Community Pharmacy, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, An-Najah National University, Nablus 44839, West Bank, Palestine.
World J Psychiatry. 2021 Jun 19;11(6):253-264. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v11.i6.253.
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has affected daily life globally dramatically over the last year. The impact of the COVID-19 epidemic on mental health is expected to be immense and likely to be long-lasting, raising a range of global problems that need to be addressed accordingly.
To analyze the Scopus-based depression research and COVID-19, explain the advancement of research nowadays, and comment on the possible hotspots of depression research and COVID-19 to obtain a more global perspective.
In this report, bibliometric analysis and visualization are used to explain COVID-19's global research status on depression and provide researchers with a guide to identify future research directions. Relevant studies on depression and COVID-19 were retrieved from the Scopus database. Visualization maps were produced using the VOSviewer software, including research collaboration.
At the time of data collection (November 18, 2020), 77217 documents were released by Scopus to COVID-19 in all areas of research. By limiting the search to depression and COVID-19 (January 2020 up until November 18, 2020), there are 1274 published articles on depression and COVID-19 in the Scopus. The great majority of which are original articles ( = 1049, 82.34%), followed by 118 review articles (9.26%), 66 letters (5.18%). The United States had the highest number of publications at 282 (22.14%), followed by China (19.07%) at 243 and Italy at 121 (9.5%). The major two clusters are signified by mental health outcomes among the general population and mental health outcomes among health care workers.
The evidence from this study found that many articles focused on mental health outcomes among the general population and health care workers. With adequate psychological support offered by the government or community agencies, mental health in various communities should be put within the local and global public health agenda. This changing situation involves the scientific community's collaborative efforts to contribute to population monitoring during quarantine and COVID-19 outbreaks and to examine the short- and long-term adverse effects on psychological well-being.
在过去一年里,2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19)极大地影响了全球的日常生活。预计COVID-19疫情对心理健康的影响将是巨大的,而且可能会持续很长时间,引发了一系列需要相应解决的全球性问题。
分析基于Scopus的抑郁症研究与COVID-19,阐述当前研究的进展,并对抑郁症研究与COVID-19可能的热点进行评论,以获得更全面的视角。
在本报告中,采用文献计量分析和可视化方法来解释COVID-19在抑郁症方面的全球研究现状,并为研究人员提供识别未来研究方向的指南。从Scopus数据库中检索关于抑郁症和COVID-19的相关研究。使用VOSviewer软件制作可视化地图,包括研究合作情况。
在数据收集时(2020年11月18日),Scopus在所有研究领域发布了77217篇关于COVID-19的文献。将搜索范围限制在抑郁症和COVID-19(2020年1月至2020年11月18日),Scopus上有1274篇关于抑郁症和COVID-19的已发表文章。其中绝大多数是原创文章(1049篇,占82.34%),其次是118篇综述文章(占9.26%),66封信件(占5.18%)。美国的出版物数量最多,为282篇(占22.14%),其次是中国(占19.07%),为243篇,意大利为121篇(占9.5%)。主要的两个聚类分别以普通人群的心理健康结果和医护人员的心理健康结果为标志。
本研究的证据发现,许多文章关注普通人群和医护人员的心理健康结果。在政府或社区机构提供充分心理支持的情况下,各社区的心理健康应被纳入地方和全球公共卫生议程。这种不断变化的情况需要科学界共同努力,以助力在隔离期间和COVID-19疫情爆发期间进行人群监测,并研究对心理健康的短期和长期不利影响。