Division of Psychiatry, University College London, Maple House, 149 Tottenham Court Road, London, W1T 7NF, UK.
Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, 18 DeCrespigny Park, London, SE5 8AF, UK.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2022 Jun;57(6):1291-1303. doi: 10.1007/s00127-022-02254-6. Epub 2022 Mar 10.
We sought to understand how the experiences of people in the UK with pre-existing mental health conditions had developed during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In September-October 2020, we interviewed adults with mental health conditions pre-dating the pandemic, whom we had previously interviewed 3 months earlier. Participants had been recruited through online advertising and voluntary sector community organisations. Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted by telephone or video-conference by researchers with lived experience of mental health difficulties, and, following principles of thematic analysis, were analysed to explore changes over time in people's experience of the pandemic.
We interviewed 44 people, achieving diversity of demographic characteristics (73% female, 54% White British, aged 18-75) and a range of mental health conditions and service use among our sample. Three overarching themes were derived from interviews. The first theme "spectrum of adaptation" describes how participants reacted to reduced access to formal and informal support through personal coping responses or seeking new sources of help, with varying degrees of success. The second theme describes "accumulating pressures" from pandemic-related anxieties and sustained disruption to social contact and support, and to mental health treatment. The third theme "feeling overlooked" reflects participants' feeling of people with mental health conditions being ignored during the pandemic by policy-makers at all levels, which was compounded for people from ethnic minority communities or with physical health problems.
In line with previous research, our study highlights the need to support marginalised groups who are at risk of increased inequalities, and to maintain crucial mental and physical healthcare and social care for people with existing mental health conditions, notwithstanding challenges of the pandemic.
我们试图了解在 COVID-19 大流行期间,英国有先前心理健康状况的人的经历是如何发展的。
在 2020 年 9 月至 10 月期间,我们采访了在大流行前患有精神健康状况的成年人,这些人之前在 3 个月前接受过采访。参与者是通过在线广告和志愿部门社区组织招募的。研究人员通过电话或视频会议对有心理健康困难生活经历的参与者进行半结构化的定性访谈,并按照主题分析的原则进行分析,以探讨人们在大流行期间经历的随时间变化。
我们采访了 44 人,实现了人口特征(73%为女性,54%为英国白人,年龄在 18-75 岁之间)和我们样本中各种精神健康状况和服务利用的多样性。从访谈中得出了三个总体主题。第一个主题“适应范围”描述了参与者如何通过个人应对反应或寻求新的帮助来源来应对正式和非正式支持的减少,其成功率各不相同。第二个主题描述了与大流行相关的焦虑以及社会接触和支持以及精神健康治疗持续中断所带来的“累积压力”。第三个主题“被忽视的感觉”反映了参与者感到在大流行期间政策制定者忽视了有精神健康状况的人,对于来自少数族裔社区或有身体健康问题的人来说,这种情况更加严重。
与之前的研究一致,我们的研究强调需要支持处于不平等风险增加的边缘化群体,并在大流行期间为有现有精神健康状况的人维持重要的精神和身体健康以及社会关怀。