Centre for Psychosocial Health, The Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Department of Psychology, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong SAR, China.
Transl Psychiatry. 2023 Feb 15;13(1):57. doi: 10.1038/s41398-023-02350-4.
Currently little is known about the interrelations between changes in psychiatric symptoms and changes in resources (personal, social, financial) amid large-scale disasters. This study investigated trajectories of psychiatric symptoms and their relationships with different patterns of changes in personal, social, and financial resources between 2020 and 2022 amid the COVID-19 pandemic. A population-representative sample (N = 1333) was recruited to complete self-report instruments at the pandemic's acute phase (February-July 2020, T1), and again at 1-year (March-August 2021, T2) and 1.5-year (September 2021-February 2022, T3) follow-ups. Respondents reported depressive and anxiety symptoms, self-efficacy, perceived social support, and financial capacity. Growth mixture modeling (GMM) identified four trajectories of depressive and anxiety symptoms: resilience (72.39-74.19%), recovery (8.40-11.93%), delayed distress (7.20-7.35%), and chronic distress (8.33-10.20%). Four patterns were demonstrated in resource changes: persistent high resources (40.89-47.64%), resource gain (12.08-15.60%), resource loss (6.30-10.43%), and persistent low resources (28.73-36.61%). Loss and gain in financial resources characterized chronic distress and resilience, respectively. Loss in personal resources characterized delayed distress, whereas loss or no gain in social resources was related to chronic/delayed distress. Respondents in resilience were also more likely to have persistent high resources while those with delayed/chronic distress were more likely to have persistent low resources. These results provide an initial evidence base for advancing current understanding on trajectories of resilience and psychopathology in the context of resource changes during and after large-scale disasters.
目前,人们对大规模灾害中精神症状的变化与个人、社会和经济资源变化之间的相互关系知之甚少。本研究调查了 2020 年至 2022 年期间 COVID-19 大流行期间精神症状的轨迹及其与个人、社会和经济资源变化不同模式之间的关系。采用代表性样本(N=1333)在疫情急性期(2020 年 2 月至 7 月,T1)完成自报式问卷,在 1 年(2021 年 3 月至 8 月,T2)和 1.5 年(2021 年 9 月至 2022 年 2 月,T3)随访时再次完成。受访者报告了抑郁和焦虑症状、自我效能感、感知社会支持和经济能力。增长混合模型(GMM)确定了抑郁和焦虑症状的四种轨迹:恢复力(72.39-74.19%)、恢复(8.40-11.93%)、延迟痛苦(7.20-7.35%)和慢性痛苦(8.33-10.20%)。资源变化表现出四种模式:持续高资源(40.89-47.64%)、资源增加(12.08-15.60%)、资源损失(6.30-10.43%)和持续低资源(28.73-36.61%)。财务资源的损失和获得分别与慢性痛苦和恢复力有关。个人资源的损失与延迟痛苦有关,而社会资源的损失或没有增加与慢性/延迟痛苦有关。恢复力组的受访者也更有可能拥有持续的高资源,而延迟/慢性痛苦组的受访者更有可能拥有持续的低资源。这些结果为在大规模灾害期间和之后资源变化的背景下,推进对恢复力和精神病理学轨迹的现有理解提供了初步证据基础。