Cognitive and Affective Regulation Laboratory (CARLA), Department of Social and Political Sciences, Institute of Psychology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
FAmily and DevelOpment Research Centre (FADO), Department of Social and Political Sciences, Institute of Psychology, University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
PLoS One. 2024 Jul 25;19(7):e0305627. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0305627. eCollection 2024.
It is well-documented that people living with obesity are at greater risk of poorer mental health outcomes. The aim of our study was twofold: First, to examine the longitudinal trajectories of depression and anxiety in people living with obesity over two years across eight waves of a UK national COVID-19 survey (March 2020-March 2022) using smoothing-splines mixed-effects models. Second, to investigate participation effects via a missingness analysis to check whether survey attrition over time was related to participant characteristics. Trajectory models showed that those living with overweight and obesity consistently reported significantly higher rates of anxiety and depression compared to those in normal weight categories over two years. Our missingness analysis revealed that depression and anxiety predicted the likelihood of responding to the survey over time, whereby those reporting higher rates of depression and anxiety were less likely to respond to the survey. Our findings add to the literature surrounding the (long-term) link between living with obesity and poor mental health. Notably, our results suggest that people who have poorer mental health were less likely to participate in the survey. Thus, we conclude that it is likely that longitudinal population survey studies potentially underreport mental health problems over time and therefore the realistic impact of obesity on mental health outcomes may be underestimated.
有大量文献表明,肥胖人群心理健康状况较差的风险更高。我们的研究目的有两个:首先,使用平滑样条混合效应模型,在英国全国 COVID-19 调查的 8 个波次中(2020 年 3 月至 2022 年 3 月),对肥胖人群在两年内的抑郁和焦虑的纵向轨迹进行检查。其次,通过缺失值分析来调查参与效果,以检查随时间推移的调查参与者流失是否与参与者特征有关。轨迹模型显示,超重和肥胖人群在两年内报告的焦虑和抑郁率明显高于正常体重人群。我们的缺失值分析表明,抑郁和焦虑随时间预测了对调查的反应可能性,即报告较高抑郁和焦虑率的人不太可能回应调查。我们的研究结果为肥胖与心理健康不良之间的(长期)关联提供了更多的文献依据。值得注意的是,我们的结果表明,心理健康较差的人更不可能参与调查。因此,我们得出结论,随着时间的推移,纵向人群调查研究可能会低估心理健康问题的报告,因此肥胖对心理健康结果的实际影响可能被低估。