Graindorge Clément Romain Hugo, Schrempft Stephanie, Pullen Nick, Baysson Hélène, Zaballa María-Eugenia, Stringhini Silvia, Nehme Mayssam, Guessous Idris
Unit of Population Epidemiology, Division of Primary Care Medicine, HUG, Geneva, Switzerland
Unit of Population Epidemiology, Division of Primary Care Medicine, HUG, Geneva, Switzerland.
BMJ Open. 2025 Jan 8;15(1):e089011. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-089011.
This study aims (1) to assess the prevalence of severe fatigue among the general population of Geneva, 2 years into the COVID-19 pandemic and (2) to identify pandemic and non-pandemic factors associated with severe fatigue.
Cross-sectional population-based survey conducted in Spring 2022.
General adult population of Geneva, Switzerland.
6870 adult participants, randomly selected from the general population, included in the Specchio-COVID-19 cohort study, were invited to answer an online health survey.
Prevalence of severe fatigue was measured by the Chalder Fatigue Questionnaire with a cut-off score≥4 out of 11. We assessed prevalence ratios of severe fatigue considering sociodemographic factors, health and behavioural characteristics (body mass index, depression, recent diagnosis of chronic disease or allergy, acute health event, smoking status, physical activity and sleep quality) and recent self-reported COVID-19 infections.
A total of 4040 individuals participated (participation rate 59%, 58% were women, mean age 53.2 (SD=14.1 years)). Overall prevalence of severe fatigue was 30.7% (95% CI=29.2%-32.1%). After adjusting for age, sex, educational level and pre-existing comorbidities, the following characteristics were associated with severe fatigue: individuals aged 18-24 years (adjusted prevalence ratio (aPR)=1.39 (1.10-1.76)) and 25-34 years (aPR=1.23 (1.05-1.45)), female sex (aPR=1.28 (1.16-1.41)), depression (aPR=2.78 (2.56-3.01)), occurrence of health events unrelated to COVID-19 (aPR=1.51 (1.38-1.65)) and self-reported COVID-19 infection in the past 12 months (aPR=1.41 (1.28-1.56)). After further adjustment for depression, previous associations were maintained except for young age.
About one-third of the adult general population of Geneva experienced severe fatigue, 2 years into the COVID-19 pandemic. Heightened fatigue among young adults is partly explained by depressive symptoms. Recent COVID-19 infection is substantially associated with severe fatigue, regardless of infection severity or co-occurrence of depressive disorder.
CCER project ID 2020-00881.
本研究旨在(1)评估新冠疫情爆发两年后,日内瓦普通人群中严重疲劳的患病率,以及(2)确定与严重疲劳相关的疫情及非疫情因素。
2022年春季进行的基于人群的横断面调查。
瑞士日内瓦的普通成年人群。
从普通人群中随机选取6870名成年参与者纳入Specchio-COVID-19队列研究,邀请他们回答一项在线健康调查。
采用Chalder疲劳问卷测量严重疲劳的患病率,截断分数为11分中≥4分。我们考虑社会人口学因素、健康和行为特征(体重指数、抑郁、近期慢性病或过敏诊断、急性健康事件、吸烟状况、体育活动和睡眠质量)以及近期自我报告的新冠病毒感染情况,评估严重疲劳的患病率比。
共有4040人参与(参与率59%,58%为女性,平均年龄53.2岁(标准差=14.1岁))。严重疲劳的总体患病率为30.7%(95%置信区间=29.2%-32.1%)。在调整年龄、性别、教育水平和既往合并症后,以下特征与严重疲劳相关:18-24岁个体(调整患病率比(aPR)=1.39(1.10-1.76))和25-34岁个体(aPR=1.23(1.05-1.45))、女性(aPR=1.28(1.16-1.41))、抑郁(aPR=2.78(2.56-3.01))、发生与新冠病毒无关的健康事件(aPR=1.51(1.38-1.65))以及过去12个月内自我报告的新冠病毒感染(aPR=1.41(1.28-1.56))。在进一步调整抑郁因素后,除了年轻年龄外,之前的关联依然存在。
新冠疫情爆发两年后,日内瓦约三分之一的成年普通人群经历了严重疲劳。年轻人疲劳加剧部分原因是抑郁症状。近期的新冠病毒感染与严重疲劳密切相关,无论感染严重程度或是否并发抑郁症。
CCER项目ID 2020-00881