Abstract

The acute and long-term mental health impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic are unknown. The current study examined the acute mental health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic in 5070 adult participants in Australia, using an online survey administered during the peak of the outbreak in Australia (27th March to 7th April 2020). Self-report questionnaires examined COVID-19 fears and behavioural responses to COVID-19, as well as the severity of psychological distress (depression, anxiety and stress), health anxiety, contamination fears, alcohol use, and physical activity. 78% of respondents reported that their mental health had worsened since the outbreak, one quarter (25.9%) were very or extremely worried about contracting COVID-19, and half (52.7%) were worried about family and friends contracting COVID-19. Uncertainty, loneliness and financial worries (50%) were common. Rates of elevated psychological distress were higher than expected, with 62%, 50%, and 64% of respondents reporting elevated depression, anxiety and stress levels respectively, and one in four reporting elevated health anxiety in the past week. Participants with self-reported history of a mental health diagnosis had significantly higher distress, health anxiety, and COVID-19 fears than those without a prior mental health diagnosis. Demographic (e.g., non-binary or different gender identity; Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander status), occupational (e.g., being a carer or stay at home parent), and psychological (e.g., perceived risk of contracting COVID-19) factors were associated with distress. Results revealed that precautionary behaviours (e.g., washing hands, using hand sanitiser, avoiding social events) were common, although in contrast to previous research, higher engagement in hygiene behaviours was associated with higher stress and anxiety levels. These results highlight the serious acute impact of COVID-19 on the mental health of respondents, and the need for proactive, accessible digital mental health services to address these mental health needs, particularly for those most vulnerable, including people with prior history of mental health problems. Longitudinal research is needed to explore long-term predictors of poor mental health from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Highlights

  • The novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) first emerged in Wuhan, China in December 2019, and has since evolved into a global pandemic

  • In another survey of 1210 members of the general public conducted between 31st January to 2nd February 2020, Wang et al [8] found that over half (53.8%) of participants rated the psychological impact of the COVID-19 outbreak as moderate to severe, three quarters were worried about their family members contracting COVID-19, and rates of moderate to severe depression, anxiety and stress were 16.5%, 28.8%, and 8.1% respectively

  • Outside of China, rates of psychological distress have varied across countries and contexts in online mental health surveys, high rates of psychological distress have been found in countries such as Mexico (50.3% reported psychological distress as moderate to severe) [16], Spain (72% had elevated psychological distress on the GHQ-12) [19], in India (25%, 28%, and 11.6% had moderate to extremely severe depression, anxiety and stress symptoms respectively) [24] during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

The novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) first emerged in Wuhan, China in December 2019, and has since evolved into a global pandemic. Outside of China, rates of psychological distress have varied across countries and contexts in online mental health surveys, high rates of psychological distress have been found in countries such as Mexico (50.3% reported psychological distress as moderate to severe) [16], Spain (72% had elevated psychological distress on the GHQ-12) [19], in India (25%, 28%, and 11.6% had moderate to extremely severe depression, anxiety and stress symptoms respectively) [24] during the COVID-19 pandemic Together these studies demonstrate the elevated psychological distress in the general community during the initial COVID-19 outbreak. We predicted that engaging in precautionary hygiene behaviours would be associated with lower distress

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