Nikolaidis Aki, DeRosa Jacob, Kass Mirelle, Droney Irene, Alexander Lindsay, Di Martino Adriana, Bromet Evelyn, Merikangas Kathleen, Milham Michael Peter, Paksarian Diana
medRxiv. 2021 Aug 11:2021.08.10.21261860. doi: 10.1101/2021.08.10.21261860.
Identifying predictors of mental health symptoms after the initial phase of the pandemic may inform the development of targeted interventions to reduce its negative long-term mental health consequences. In the current study, we aimed to simultaneously evaluate the prospective influence of life change stress, personal COVID-19 impact, prior mental health, worry about COVID-19, state-level indicators of pandemic threat, and socio-demographic factors on mood and anxiety symptoms in November 2020 among adults and children in the US and UK. We used a longitudinal cohort study using the Coronavirus Health Impact Survey (CRISIS) collected at 3 time points: an initial assessment in April 2020 ("April"), a reassessment 3 weeks later ("May"), and a 7-month follow-up in November 2020 ("November"). Online surveys were collected in the United States and United Kingdom by Prolific Academic, a survey recruitment service, with a final sample of 859 Adults and 780 children (collected via parent report). We found subtypes of pandemic-related life change stress in social and economic domains derived through Louvain Community Detection. We assessed recalled mood and perceived mental health prior to the pandemic; worries about COVID-19; personal and family impacts of COVID-19; and socio-demographic characteristics. Levels of mood symptoms in November 2020 measured with the circumplex model of affect. We found 3 life change stress subtypes among adults and children: Lower Social/Lower Economic (adults and children), Higher Social/Higher Economic (adults and children), Lower Social/Higher Economic (adults), and Intermediate Social/Lower Economic (children). Overall, mood symptoms decreased between April and November 2020, but shifting from lower to higher-stress subtypes between time points was associated with increasing symptoms. For both adults and children, the most informative predictors of mood symptoms in November identified by conditional random forest models were prior mood and perceived mental health, worries about COVID, and sources of life change. The relative importance of these predictors was the most prominent difference in findings between adults and children, with lifestyle changes stress regarding friendships being more predictive of mood outcomes than worries about COVID in children. In the US, objective state-level indicators of COVID-19 threat were less predictive of November mood than these other predictors. We found that in addition to the well-established influences of prior mood and worry, heterogeneous subtypes of pandemic-related stress were differentially associated with mood after the initial phase of the pandemic. Greater research on diverse patterns of pandemic experience may elucidate modifiable targets for treatment and prevention.
确定疫情初始阶段后心理健康症状的预测因素,可能有助于制定有针对性的干预措施,以减少其对长期心理健康的负面影响。在本研究中,我们旨在同时评估生活变化压力、个人新冠疫情影响、既往心理健康状况、对新冠疫情的担忧、疫情威胁的州级指标以及社会人口学因素对2020年11月美国和英国成年人及儿童情绪和焦虑症状的前瞻性影响。我们采用了一项纵向队列研究,使用在三个时间点收集的冠状病毒健康影响调查(CRISIS):2020年4月的初始评估(“4月”)、3周后的重新评估(“5月”)以及2020年11月的7个月随访(“11月”)。美国和英国通过调查招募服务机构Prolific Academic收集在线调查问卷,最终样本包括859名成年人和780名儿童(通过家长报告收集)。我们通过鲁汶社区检测法发现了社会和经济领域中与疫情相关的生活变化压力亚型。我们评估了疫情前回忆起的情绪和感知到的心理健康状况;对新冠疫情的担忧;新冠疫情对个人和家庭的影响;以及社会人口学特征。使用情感环形模型测量了2020年11月的情绪症状水平。我们在成年人和儿童中发现了3种生活变化压力亚型:低社会/低经济(成年人和儿童)、高社会/高经济(成年人和儿童)、低社会/高经济(成年人)以及中等社会/低经济(儿童)。总体而言,2020年4月至11月期间情绪症状有所下降,但不同时间点之间从低压力亚型转变为高压力亚型与症状增加有关。对于成年人和儿童来说,条件随机森林模型确定的2020年11月情绪症状最具信息量的预测因素是既往情绪和感知到的心理健康状况、对新冠疫情的担忧以及生活变化的来源。这些预测因素的相对重要性是成年人和儿童研究结果中最显著的差异,与对新冠疫情的担忧相比,儿童中与友谊相关的生活方式变化压力对情绪结果的预测性更强。在美国,新冠疫情威胁的客观州级指标对11月情绪的预测性低于其他这些预测因素。我们发现,除了既往情绪和担忧的既定影响外,疫情相关压力的异质亚型在疫情初始阶段后与情绪存在不同程度的关联。对不同疫情经历模式进行更多研究可能会阐明可改变的治疗和预防目标。