Department of Psychology, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Regensburg, Regensburg, Germany.
BMC Psychiatry. 2022 Aug 5;22(1):528. doi: 10.1186/s12888-022-04148-y.
Many studies have previously compared the prevalence or sample means of distress and mental health problems from before to during the COVID-19 pandemic, while results on changes at the individual-level, and regarding multiple outcome measures are demanded.
This online study investigated individual changes in stress and mental health from before the COVID-19 pandemic to the first lockdown in adults from Southeastern Germany. This region was selected as it was where SARS-CoV-2 was first documented in Germany, and also due to the implementation of strict stay-at-home orders and social contact prohibitions. From April 10-27, 2020, we collected state measures and their clinical relevance for the subareas of perceived stress: worries, tension, joy, and demands. We also collected information regarding the following mental health problems: depression, anxiety, pathological worry, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and health anxiety; as well as retrospective measures of how participants felt they have changed in comparison to before the pandemic, ranging from worse to better.
The analytical sample comprised 396 adult participants. On average, participants experienced increases in worries, tension, and lack of joy, and increases in mental health problems, but a decrease in demands. Perceived increases in symptoms of depression (26.0%) and PTSD (25.5%) were significantly more frequent than in symptoms of anxiety (particularly acute fear and panic) (5.6%), pathological worry (9.8%), and health anxiety (7.3%) (ps<.001). One per 10 participants (10.4%) reported an increase in depressive symptoms, and nearly two per 10 (18.4%) an increase in PTSD symptoms and additionally showed a clinically relevant symptom strain during lockdown. Interestingly, mainly non-specific PTSD symptoms associated with a general stress reaction were experienced to be increased.
The findings suggest a dissociation of perceived changes in subareas of stress and mental health with a particular experience of increases in depressive and general stress symptoms and a decrease in external demands. This points to a need for a more differentiated view on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on stress and mental health, and for targeted interventions for mental health problems arising frequently during the pandemic.
许多研究之前比较了 COVID-19 大流行前后困扰和心理健康问题的患病率或样本均值,而对于个体水平的变化以及关于多种结果测量的结果则有需求。
本项在线研究调查了德国东南部成年人从 COVID-19 大流行前到第一次封锁期间压力和心理健康的个体变化。选择该地区是因为它是德国首次记录 SARS-CoV-2 的地方,并且还因为实施了严格的居家令和社会接触禁令。从 2020 年 4 月 10 日至 27 日,我们收集了状态措施及其对感知压力亚区的临床相关性:担忧、紧张、喜悦和需求。我们还收集了以下心理健康问题的信息:抑郁、焦虑、病理性担忧、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和健康焦虑;以及参与者与大流行前相比感觉自己变化的回顾性测量,范围从更糟到更好。
分析样本包括 396 名成年参与者。平均而言,参与者经历了担忧、紧张和喜悦感的增加,以及心理健康问题的增加,但需求减少。感知到的抑郁症状(26.0%)和 PTSD 症状(25.5%)的增加明显比焦虑症状(特别是急性恐惧和恐慌)(5.6%)、病理性担忧(9.8%)和健康焦虑(7.3%)更为频繁(p<.001)。每 10 名参与者中就有 1 名(10.4%)报告抑郁症状增加,近 2 名(18.4%)报告 PTSD 症状增加,并且在封锁期间表现出临床相关的症状紧张。有趣的是,主要是非特异性的 PTSD 症状与一般应激反应相关,被认为是增加的。
这些发现表明,压力和心理健康的各个亚区的感知变化与抑郁和一般应激症状的增加以及外部需求的减少之间存在脱节。这表明需要对 COVID-19 大流行对压力和心理健康的影响有更具差异化的看法,并需要针对大流行期间经常出现的心理健康问题进行有针对性的干预。