Department of Nursing, Chung-ang University, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
JMIR Public Health Surveill. 2023 Feb 22;9:e42677. doi: 10.2196/42677.
As of January 2022, the number of people infected with COVID-19 worldwide has exceeded 350 million. As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, people are affected in a wide range of areas of life, which in turn causes numerous psychological problems. Depression is a serious problem for people who have suffered from COVID-19. Depression can worsen COVID-19 precautionary behavior compliance or the health behavior itself. In addition, these depressive symptoms may have different characteristics depending on the individual's gender.
The aim of this study was to determine whether depression is a factor that may affect COVID-19 fear, precautionary behavior compliance, and health behavior, and how these characteristic trends differ by gender.
This was a secondary analysis of data from the 2020 Korea Community Health Survey (KCHS), a national cross-sectional survey conducted with complex sampling analysis. In 2020, the KCHS included COVID-19-related questions. For this study, we used the KCHS data from both the COVID-19-related questions and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 scale. After weighting the data according to the KCHS guidelines, we calculated the distribution of men and women according to depression level. The data were collected using multiple-choice questions related to precautionary behavior compliance, COVID-19-related fears, and health behavior changes.
Of the 204,787 participants, those who were clinically depressed had a greater tendency to not comply with precautionary behaviors. Regarding COVID-19, "fear" showed a decreasing trend in both men (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 0.72, 95% CI 0.61-0.83) and women (AOR 0.74, 95% CI 0.63-0.86) with clinically relevant depression. Moreover, for both men and women, health behaviors deteriorated as depression intensified; the AOR for sleep duration changes was 2.28 (95% CI 2.00-2.59) in men and was 2.15 (95% CI 1.96-2.36) in women. Notably, the responses of clinically depressed women revealed a doubled increase in both their drinking (AOR 2.25, 95% CI 1.88-2.70) and smoking (AOR 2.71, 95% CI 1.95-3.77) habits compared with those of nondepressed women.
Both men and women with more severe depression were more likely to violate precautionary health behaviors as their depression worsened. Health behaviors also deteriorated for both genders, but women tended to show a greater change. Therefore, additional studies and interventions for vulnerable groups such as severely depressed people are needed. More research is also necessary to develop interventions based on statistical comparisons of men and women.
截至 2022 年 1 月,全球感染 COVID-19 的人数已超过 3.5 亿。随着 COVID-19 大流行的持续,人们在生活的各个领域都受到了影响,这反过来又导致了许多心理问题。抑郁症是 COVID-19 感染者的一个严重问题。抑郁症会恶化 COVID-19 的预防行为遵守情况或健康行为本身。此外,这些抑郁症状可能因个体的性别而具有不同的特征。
本研究旨在确定抑郁症是否是可能影响 COVID-19 恐惧、预防行为遵守和健康行为的因素,以及这些特征趋势如何因性别而异。
这是对 2020 年韩国社区健康调查(KCHS)数据的二次分析,这是一项采用复杂抽样分析进行的全国性横断面调查。2020 年,KCHS 包含了与 COVID-19 相关的问题。在这项研究中,我们使用了 KCHS 中与 COVID-19 相关问题和患者健康问卷-9 量表的数据。根据 KCHS 指南对数据进行加权后,我们根据抑郁程度计算了男性和女性的分布情况。数据是通过与预防行为遵守、COVID-19 相关恐惧和健康行为变化相关的多项选择问题收集的。
在 204787 名参与者中,有临床抑郁症状的人更倾向于不遵守预防行为。对于 COVID-19,在有临床相关抑郁的男性(调整后的优势比 [AOR] 0.72,95%CI 0.61-0.83)和女性(AOR 0.74,95%CI 0.63-0.86)中,“恐惧”呈下降趋势。此外,对于男性和女性来说,随着抑郁程度的加重,健康行为恶化;睡眠时间变化的 AOR 为 2.28(95%CI 2.00-2.59),女性为 2.15(95%CI 1.96-2.36)。值得注意的是,有临床抑郁的女性对饮酒(AOR 2.25,95%CI 1.88-2.70)和吸烟(AOR 2.71,95%CI 1.95-3.77)的习惯的反应显示出与无抑郁女性相比,增加了一倍。
无论男性还是女性,随着抑郁的加重,更有可能违反预防健康行为。两性的健康行为也都恶化了,但女性的变化趋势更大。因此,需要对严重抑郁等弱势群体进行更多的研究和干预。还需要更多的研究来根据男性和女性的统计比较制定干预措施。