School of Public Policy and Administration, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, China.
Division of Research Patient Care Services, Stanford Health Care, Palo Alto, CA, 94305, USA.
Int J Equity Health. 2023 Oct 17;22(1):219. doi: 10.1186/s12939-023-02022-1.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had major ramifications for health and the economy at both the individual and collective levels. This study examined exogenous negative changes in household income and their implications on psychological well-being (PWB) among the Chinese population during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Data were drawn from the early China COVID-19 Survey, a cross-sectional anonymous online survey administered to the general population in China. Self-reported PWB was measured using a 5-point Likert scale with five questions related to the participants' recent psychological state. Hierarchical multiple linear regression was employed to examine whether income loss during the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with poor psychological health.
This study included 8,428 adults, of which 90% had suffered from a moderate or severe loss of household income due to the early COVID-19 pandemic. Those who had experienced moderate or severe loss of income scored significantly lower on psychological well-being than those who did not experience income loss (19.96 or 18.07 vs. 21.46; P < 0.001); after controlling for confounders, income loss was negatively associated with PWB scores (moderate income loss: B = - 0.603, P < 0.001; severe income loss: B = - 1.261, P < 0.001). An interaction effect existed between the degree of income loss and pre-pandemic income groups. Specifically, participants in the middle-income group who had suffered severe income loss scored the lowest on PWB (B = - 1.529, P < 0.001). There was also a main effect on income loss, such that participants with varying degrees of income loss differed across five dimensions, including anhedonia, sleep problems, irritability or anger, difficulty with concentration, and repeated disturbing dreams related to COVID-19.
Income loss during the pandemic has had detrimental consequences on psychological well-being, and the magnitude of the impact of income loss on psychological well-being varied according to previous income levels. Future policy efforts should be directed toward improving the psychological well-being of the economically vulnerable and helping them recover from lost income in the shortest time possible.
新冠疫情对个人和集体的健康和经济都产生了重大影响。本研究探讨了疫情期间中国人群家庭收入的外在负向变化及其对心理健康的影响。
数据来自早期中国新冠疫情调查,这是一项针对中国普通人群的横断面匿名在线调查。使用 5 点 Likert 量表,通过与参与者近期心理状态相关的五个问题来衡量主观幸福感。采用分层多元线性回归检验疫情期间收入损失是否与心理健康状况较差有关。
本研究纳入了 8428 名成年人,其中 90%的人因早期新冠疫情而遭受中度或重度家庭收入损失。与没有收入损失的人相比,经历中度或重度收入损失的人在主观幸福感方面得分明显较低(19.96 或 18.07 与 21.46;P<0.001);在校正混杂因素后,收入损失与主观幸福感评分呈负相关(中度收入损失:B=-0.603,P<0.001;重度收入损失:B=-1.261,P<0.001)。收入损失程度与疫情前收入群体之间存在交互效应。具体来说,遭受重度收入损失的中等收入组参与者在主观幸福感方面得分最低(B=-1.529,P<0.001)。收入损失也存在主效应,即不同程度收入损失的参与者在五个维度上存在差异,包括快感缺失、睡眠问题、易怒或愤怒、注意力难以集中和与新冠相关的反复困扰性梦境。
疫情期间的收入损失对心理健康产生了不利影响,收入损失对心理健康的影响程度因先前的收入水平而异。未来的政策努力应针对改善经济弱势群体的心理健康,并帮助他们在最短的时间内从收入损失中恢复。