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在新冠疫情期间,是什么让一些年轻人与众不同?澳大利亚一项纵向研究中的心理健康轨迹、风险和保护因素。

What set some young adults apart during the COVID-19 pandemic? Mental health trajectories, risk and protective factors in an Australian longitudinal study.

作者信息

Donohoe-Bales Amarina, O'Dean Siobhan, Smout Scarlett, Boyle Julia, Barrett Emma, Teesson Maree, Bower Marlee

机构信息

The Matilda Centre for Research in Mental Health and Substance Use, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.

出版信息

Aust N Z J Psychiatry. 2024 May;58(5):435-445. doi: 10.1177/00048674231223690. Epub 2024 Jan 11.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Evidence suggests that young adults (aged 18-34) were disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic, but little is known about their longer-term mental health changes beyond the early pandemic period. This article investigates heterogeneous trajectories of mental health among Australian young adults across 2 years of the pandemic and identifies a broad range of associated risk and protective factors.

METHOD

Young adults ( = 653, M = 27.8 years) from the longitudinal Alone Together Study were surveyed biannually between July 2020 and June 2022. Measures assessed anxiety (7-item Generalised Anxiety Disorder scale) and depression (9-item Patient Health Questionnaire) symptoms at Waves 1-4, as well as demographic, psychological, adversity and COVID-19 factors at baseline.

RESULTS

Four and three distinct trajectories of anxiety and depressive symptoms, respectively, were identified through growth mixture modelling. The proportion of participants in each anxiety trajectory were Asymptomatic (45.9%), Mild Stable (17.9%), Moderate-Severe Stable (31.1%) and Initially Severe/Recovering (5.1%). For depression, Mild Stable (58.3%), Moderate-Severe Stable (30.5%) and Reactive/Recovering (11.2%). Baseline factors associated with severe symptom trajectories included a lifetime mental health disorder, pre-pandemic stressful events, identifying as LGBTQIA+ and/or female, and experiencing one or more infection-control measures. Higher household income was protective.

CONCLUSION

Most young adults demonstrated stable trajectories of low or high symptoms during the pandemic, with smaller groups showing initially severe or reactive symptoms followed by marked improvements over time. Vulnerable subgroups (gender- or sexuality-diverse, those with prior adversity or pre-existing mental ill-health) may face ongoing impacts and require targeted psychosocial supports to assist their mental health recovery post-COVID-19 and in the event of future crises.

摘要

目的

有证据表明,年轻人(18 - 34岁)受新冠疫情的影响尤为严重,但对于疫情早期之后他们的长期心理健康变化却知之甚少。本文调查了澳大利亚年轻人在疫情两年间心理健康的异质性轨迹,并确定了一系列相关的风险和保护因素。

方法

来自纵向研究“独自相伴”的年轻人(n = 653,平均年龄27.8岁)在2020年7月至2022年6月期间接受了每半年一次的调查。在第1 - 4波测量中评估焦虑(7项广泛性焦虑症量表)和抑郁(9项患者健康问卷)症状,同时在基线时评估人口统计学、心理、逆境和新冠相关因素。

结果

通过增长混合模型分别确定了焦虑和抑郁症状的四种和三种不同轨迹。各焦虑轨迹参与者的比例分别为无症状(45.9%)、轻度稳定(17.9%)、中度 - 重度稳定(31.1%)和最初严重/恢复中(5.1%)。对于抑郁,轻度稳定(58.3%)、中度 - 重度稳定(30.5%)和反应性/恢复中(11.2%)。与严重症状轨迹相关的基线因素包括终生心理健康障碍、疫情前的应激事件(1)、自我认同为LGBTQIA+和/或女性,以及经历一项或多项感染控制措施。较高的家庭收入具有保护作用。

结论

大多数年轻人在疫情期间表现出低症状或高症状的稳定轨迹,较小比例的群体最初表现出严重或反应性症状,随后随时间显著改善。弱势群体(性别或性取向不同、有先前逆境或既往心理健康问题的人)可能面临持续影响,需要有针对性的社会心理支持,以帮助他们在新冠疫情后及未来危机情况下恢复心理健康。 (1) 此处“pre-pandemic stressful events”直译为“疫情前的应激事件”,结合语境推测可能是指在疫情之前发生的一些会造成心理压力的事件,比如失业、亲人离世等,但由于没有更多背景信息,无法进一步明确具体所指。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/d4e1/11055410/7f5040cb860d/10.1177_00048674231223690-fig1.jpg

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