Holm-Hadulla Rainer Matthias, Wendler Hannes, Baracsi Gabriella, Storck Timo, Möltner Andreas, Herpertz Sabine C
Department of General Psychiatry, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health East, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile, Santiago, Chile.
Front Psychiatry. 2023 Aug 7;14:1200643. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1200643. eCollection 2023.
In a quasi-naturalistic study design, we evaluate the change in psychopathological syndromes and general well-being after the alleviation of social restrictions. The aim of this study was to investigate the specific relationship between social isolation and depressive syndromes.
At two timepoints, the first during maximal social restrictions, the second after social restrictions had widely ended for 9 months, depressive and other syndromes were measured in an online survey addressing the total cohort of students registered at Heidelberg University, Germany via e-mail ( = 27,162). The complete Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ) was used with nine items for depressive syndromes. In addition, well-being was measured by the Well-Being Index WHO-5. In the quantitative and qualitative part of the study psychopathological syndromes and well-being were related to social isolation and feelings of loneliness.
After 1.5 years of pandemic-related social restrictions, "major" depressive syndromes were reported by 40.16% of the respondents to the PHQ in a sample of 2,318 university students. 72.52% showed a severely reduced Well-Being-Index. Nine months after the end of social restrictions, "major" depressive syndromes were reported by 28.50% of the participants. Well-being improved after the alleviation of social restrictions, as well: 53.96% showed a Well-Being Index of below 50 vs. 72.52% in the first study. The quantitative and qualitative analysis of the free texts of the respondents suggest that a significant amount of depressive syndromes and reduced well-being are related to social isolation and loneliness. While in the times of the pandemic restrictions the participants mostly reported "loneliness and social isolation" (24.2%) as their main problem, only 7.7% described these as their main problem after social restrictions had been loosened for 9 months. The qualitative analysis hints that at t2 participants were more likely to mention possible ways to actively deal with loneliness than at t1, which might be interpreted along the lines of the decrease in depressive syndromes.
Keeping the self-selection bias in mind our study results suggest that one third of "major" depressive syndromes and one quarter of severely reduced well-being accompany social restrictions or are even caused by them, with loneliness being an important factor. These results should be taken into account by health policies when coping with future pandemics.
在一项准自然主义研究设计中,我们评估了社会限制解除后精神病理综合征和总体幸福感的变化。本研究的目的是调查社会隔离与抑郁综合征之间的具体关系。
在两个时间点进行测量,第一个时间点是在社会限制最严格的时候,第二个时间点是在社会限制广泛解除9个月后,通过电子邮件对德国海德堡大学注册的全体学生(n = 27162)进行在线调查,以测量抑郁和其他综合征。使用完整的患者健康问卷(PHQ)中的九个项目来评估抑郁综合征。此外,使用世界卫生组织幸福指数(WHO-5)来测量幸福感。在研究的定量和定性部分,将精神病理综合征和幸福感与社会隔离和孤独感相关联。
在与疫情相关的社会限制实施1.5年后,在2318名大学生的样本中,40.16%的PHQ受访者报告有“重度”抑郁综合征。72.52%的人幸福感指数严重降低。社会限制解除9个月后,28.50%的参与者报告有“重度”抑郁综合征。社会限制解除后幸福感也有所改善:在第一次研究中,53.96%的人幸福感指数低于50,而在第一次研究中这一比例为72.52%。对受访者自由文本的定量和定性分析表明,大量的抑郁综合征和幸福感降低与社会隔离和孤独感有关。在疫情限制时期,参与者大多将“孤独和社会隔离”(24.2%)作为他们的主要问题,而在社会限制解除9个月后,只有7.7%的人将这些描述为他们的主要问题。定性分析表明,在t2时,参与者比在t1时更有可能提及积极应对孤独的可能方法,这可能与抑郁综合征的减少有关。
考虑到自我选择偏差,我们的研究结果表明,三分之一的“重度”抑郁综合征和四分之一的幸福感严重降低伴随着社会限制,甚至是由社会限制导致的,孤独是一个重要因素。在应对未来疫情时,卫生政策应考虑这些结果。