Infanti Alexandre, Starcevic Vladan, Schimmenti Adriano, Khazaal Yasser, Karila Laurent, Giardina Alessandro, Flayelle Maèva, Hedayatzadeh Razavi Seyedeh Boshra, Baggio Stéphanie, Vögele Claus, Billieux Joël
Department of Behavioural and Cognitive Sciences, University of Luxembourg, Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.
Department of Psychiatry, Nepean Hospital, Penrith, Australia.
JMIR Form Res. 2023 Apr 25;7:e42206. doi: 10.2196/42206.
Cyberchondria is characterized by repeated and compulsive online searches for health information, resulting in increased health anxiety and distress. It has been conceptualized as a multidimensional construct fueled by both anxiety and compulsivity-related factors and described as a "transdiagnostic compulsive behavioral syndrome," which is associated with health anxiety, problematic internet use, and obsessive-compulsive symptoms. Cyberchondria is not included in the International Classification of Diseases 11th Revision or the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition, and its defining features, etiological mechanisms, and assessment continue to be debated.
This study aims to investigate changes in the severity of cyberchondria during the COVID-19 pandemic and identify the predictors of cyberchondria at this time.
Data collection started on May 4, 2020, and ended on June 10, 2020, which corresponds to the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. At the time the study took place, French-speaking countries in Europe (France, Switzerland, Belgium, and Luxembourg) all implemented lockdown or semilockdown measures. The survey consisted of a questionnaire collecting demographic information (sex, age, education level, and country of residence) and information about socioeconomic circumstances during the first lockdown (eg, economic situation, housing, and employment status) and was followed by several instruments assessing various psychological and health-related constructs. Inclusion criteria for the study were being at least 18 years of age and having a good understanding of French. Self-report data were collected from 725 participants aged 18-77 (mean 33.29, SD 12.88) years, with females constituting the majority (416/725, 57.4%).
The results showed that the COVID-19 pandemic affected various facets of cyberchondria: cyberchondria-related distress and compulsion increased (distress z=-3.651, P<.001; compulsion z=-5.697, P<.001), whereas the reassurance facet of cyberchondria decreased (z=-6.680, P<.001). In addition, COVID-19-related fears and health anxiety emerged as the strongest predictors of cyberchondria-related distress and interference with functioning during the pandemic.
These findings provide evidence of the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on cyberchondria and identify factors that should be considered in efforts to prevent and manage cyberchondria at times of public health crises. In addition, they are consistent with a theoretical model of cyberchondria during the COVID-19 pandemic proposed in 2020. These findings have implications for the conceptualization and future assessment of cyberchondria.
网络疑病症的特征是反复且强迫性地在网上搜索健康信息,导致健康焦虑和痛苦加剧。它被概念化为一种由焦虑和强迫相关因素驱动的多维度结构,并被描述为一种“跨诊断强迫行为综合征”,与健康焦虑、问题性互联网使用和强迫症状有关。网络疑病症未被纳入《国际疾病分类》第11版或《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版,其定义特征、病因机制和评估仍存在争议。
本研究旨在调查新冠疫情期间网络疑病症严重程度的变化,并确定此时网络疑病症的预测因素。
数据收集于2020年5月4日开始,至2020年6月10日结束,这对应于欧洲新冠疫情的第一波。在研究进行时,欧洲的法语国家(法国、瑞士、比利时和卢森堡)都实施了封锁或半封锁措施。该调查包括一份收集人口统计学信息(性别、年龄、教育水平和居住国家)以及首次封锁期间社会经济状况信息(如经济状况、住房和就业状况)的问卷,随后是几份评估各种心理和健康相关结构的量表。该研究的纳入标准为年龄至少18岁且精通法语。从725名年龄在18 - 77岁(平均33.29岁,标准差12.88岁)的参与者中收集自我报告数据,其中女性占多数(416/725,57.4%)。
结果显示,新冠疫情影响了网络疑病症的各个方面:与网络疑病症相关的痛苦和强迫行为增加(痛苦z = -3.651,P <.001;强迫行为z = -5.697,P <.001),而网络疑病症的安心方面则有所下降(z = -6.680,P <.001)。此外,与新冠疫情相关的恐惧和健康焦虑成为疫情期间网络疑病症相关痛苦和功能障碍的最强预测因素。
这些发现提供了新冠疫情对网络疑病症影响的证据,并确定了在公共卫生危机时期预防和管理网络疑病症时应考虑的因素。此外,它们与2020年提出的新冠疫情期间网络疑病症的理论模型一致。这些发现对网络疑病症的概念化和未来评估具有启示意义。