Richter Ernst Peter, Brähler Elmar, Zenger Markus, Stöbel-Richter Yve, Emmerich Franziska, Junghans Julia, Krause Juliana, Irmscher Lisa, Berth Hendrik
Research Group for Applied Medical Psychology and Medical Sociology, Division of Psychological and Social Medicine and Developmental Neurosciences, Faculty of Medicine, TU Dresden, 01307 Dresden, Germany.
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg University, 55131 Mainz, Germany.
J Clin Med. 2024 Aug 13;13(16):4754. doi: 10.3390/jcm13164754.
The early 2020s witnessed an unprecedented overlap of multiple global crises. This longitudinal study examined the compounded effects of multiple intersecting global crises on mental health outcomes in a representative cohort of East German adults. We investigated how perceived threats (PT) from climate change (PT-CLC), COVID-19 (PT-COV), the Russia-Ukraine War (PT-RUW), and rising costs of living (PT-RCL) will impact various aspects of mental health from 2021 to 2022. This research question addresses whether these crises exacerbate mental health issues and how their effects differ across various mental health outcomes. We conducted a longitudinal study with 319 participants (mean age 49.9 years, 54.5% female) from the Saxony Longitudinal Study. Data were collected in two waves: March-July 2021 and September-December 2022. We used linear mixed-effects models to analyze both unadjusted group trends and adjusted individual-level effects on physical complaints, mental distress, sleep problems, life satisfaction, and self-rated health. Unadjusted analyses revealed significant increases in mental distress and sleep problems over time, whereas physical complaints, life satisfaction, and self-rated health remained stable at the group level. Adjusted analyses showed that higher PT-RCL and PT-COV were significantly associated with increased physical complaints, mental distress, sleep problems, and decreased life satisfaction, even when group-level changes were not significant. This study highlights the complex impact of intersecting global crises on mental health, emphasizing the importance of considering both population-level trends and individual perceptions. The findings suggest that economic and pandemic-related stressors have more immediate effects on mental health outcomes compared to more distant threats, such as climate change or geopolitical conflicts.
21世纪20年代初,多种全球危机出现了前所未有的重叠。这项纵向研究考察了多重相互交织的全球危机对东德成年代表性队列心理健康结果的综合影响。我们调查了2021年至2022年期间,气候变化感知威胁(PT-CLC)、新冠疫情(PT-COV)、俄乌战争(PT-RUW)和生活成本上升(PT-RCL)如何影响心理健康的各个方面。这个研究问题探讨了这些危机是否会加剧心理健康问题,以及它们在不同心理健康结果上的影响有何差异。我们对来自萨克森纵向研究的319名参与者(平均年龄49.9岁,54.5%为女性)进行了纵向研究。数据分两波收集:2021年3月至7月和2022年9月至12月。我们使用线性混合效应模型分析未经调整的组趋势以及对身体不适、精神痛苦、睡眠问题、生活满意度和自评健康的个体水平调整效应。未经调整的分析显示,随着时间推移,精神痛苦和睡眠问题显著增加,而身体不适、生活满意度和自评健康在组水平上保持稳定。调整后的分析表明,即使组水平变化不显著,较高的PT-RCL和PT-COV与身体不适、精神痛苦、睡眠问题增加以及生活满意度下降显著相关。这项研究强调了相互交织的全球危机对心理健康的复杂影响,强调了考虑总体趋势和个体认知的重要性。研究结果表明,与气候变化或地缘政治冲突等更遥远的威胁相比,经济和大流行相关的压力源对心理健康结果的影响更为直接。