Department of Biostatistics, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland.
JAMA Netw Open. 2024 Jul 1;7(7):e2424601. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.24601.
Given the expiration of expanded unemployment and other benefits during the COVID-19 pandemic, it is important to understand the association between pandemic income or job loss and long-term implications on mental health.
To evaluate the association between income or job loss due to the COVID-19 pandemic and later psychological distress.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study used 5 waves of nationally representative, longitudinal survey data (September 16, 2019, through September 18, 2022) from the Pew Research Center's American Trends Panel. Doubly robust propensity score-weighted quasi-Poisson models were used to estimate the association of self or household income or job loss during the early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic with later psychological distress, while controlling for pre-income loss characteristics (demographics, finances, and psychological distress). The study sample comprised US working-age adults (aged 18-64 years) who had not experienced income or job loss due to the COVID-19 pandemic by March 24, 2020.
Participant-reported self or household income or job loss (ie, reduced hours or demand for work) due to the COVID19 pandemic between March 24, 2020, and August 16, 2020.
Psychological distress was measured using a composite scale of 0 to 15 based on participants' reported frequency of feeling depressed, on edge, sleepless, lonely, and hopeless in the past week in March 2020, February 2021, and September 2022.
Of 1392 working-age adults (survey weighted 52.7% male and 47.7% aged 30-49 years) who had not reported income or job loss before March 24, 2020, a survey weighted 35.7% reported job or income loss between March 24 and August 16, 2020. Early-phase pandemic income or job loss was associated with higher distress in February 2021 (estimated ratio, 1.09; 95% CI, 1.01-1.18; P = .03) and September 2022 (estimated ratio, 1.11; 95% CI, 1.02-1.22; P = .02) among participants who experienced job or income loss between March 24 and August 16, 2020, compared with the propensity score-weighted mean in the group who did not experience income loss.
These small but significant within-person associations between early-phase pandemic household income or job loss and psychological distress up to 29 months later suggest that policies are needed to support people with income or job loss to help mitigate the long-term adverse mental health outcomes of economic disruption.
鉴于 COVID-19 大流行期间扩大的失业和其他福利的到期,了解大流行期间的收入或工作损失与长期心理健康影响之间的关系非常重要。
评估 COVID-19 大流行期间因收入或工作损失与后期心理困扰之间的关联。
设计、地点和参与者:本队列研究使用了来自皮尤研究中心美国趋势小组的 5 波具有全国代表性的纵向调查数据(2019 年 9 月 16 日至 2022 年 9 月 18 日)。使用双重稳健倾向评分加权拟泊松模型来估计 COVID-19 大流行早期阶段的自我或家庭收入或工作损失与后期心理困扰之间的关联,同时控制收入损失前的特征(人口统计学、财务状况和心理困扰)。研究样本包括美国工作年龄成年人(18-64 岁),他们在 2020 年 3 月 24 日之前没有因 COVID-19 大流行而经历收入或工作损失。
参与者报告的自我或家庭收入或工作损失(即由于 COVID-19 大流行而减少工作时间或工作需求),发生在 2020 年 3 月 24 日至 2020 年 8 月 16 日之间。
使用基于参与者在 2020 年 3 月、2021 年 2 月和 2022 年 9 月报告的过去一周内感到沮丧、紧张、失眠、孤独和绝望的频率的 0 到 15 分的复合量表来衡量心理困扰。
在 1392 名没有在 2020 年 3 月 24 日之前报告收入或工作损失的工作年龄成年人(调查加权 52.7%为男性,47.7%为 30-49 岁)中,有 35.7%的人报告在 2020 年 3 月 24 日至 8 月 16 日之间失业或收入损失。与没有经历收入损失的组的倾向评分加权平均值相比,2020 年 3 月 24 日至 8 月 16 日期间经历工作或收入损失的参与者在 2021 年 2 月(估计比值,1.09;95%CI,1.01-1.18;P=0.03)和 2022 年 9 月(估计比值,1.11;95%CI,1.02-1.22;P=0.02)时的心理困扰更高。
这些在个人内部观察到的早期大流行家庭收入或工作损失与 29 个月后心理困扰之间的微小但显著的关联表明,需要制定政策来支持失业或收入损失的人,以帮助减轻经济动荡对长期不良心理健康的影响。