Abstract

Background: The COVID-19 pandemic led to mental health fallout in the US; yet research about mental health and COVID-19 primarily rely on national and group-specific samples. However, betweencity comparisons may provide further insight into how the pandemic is disproportionately affecting atrisk groups. Purpose: This study leverages social media and COVID-19-city infection data to measure the longitudinal (January 22- July 31, 2020) mental health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in 20 metropolitan areas. Methods: We used longitudinal VADER sentiment analysis of Twitter timelines (January-July 2020) for cohorts in 20 metropolitan areas to examine mood changes over time. We then conducted simple and multivariate Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regressions to examine the relationship between COVID-19 infection city data, population, population density, and city demographics on sentiment across those 20 cities. Results: Longitudinal sentiment tracking showed declines in subjective well-being over time. The univariate OLS regression highlighted a negative linear relationship between COVID-19 city data and online sentiment (𝛽 = -0.017). Residing in predominantly white cities had a protective effect against COVID-19 driven negative mood (𝛽= .0629, pConclusion: The COVID-19 pandemic is a driver of declining US mood in 20 metropolitan cities. Other factors, including social unrest and local demographics, may compound and exacerbate mental health outlook in racially diverse cities.Funding Statement: This study was not supported by an external grant.Declaration of Interests: The authors declare no competing interest.

Highlights

  • Mental health reports indicate that the US population experienced increased psychological distress and worsening of preexisting psychiatric conditions as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic [1, 2]

  • The COVID-19 pandemic led to mental health fallout in the US; yet research about mental health and COVID-19 primarily rely on samples that may overlook variance in regional mental health

  • Residing in predominantly white cities had a protective effect against COVID-19 driven negative mood (β = .0629, p < .001)

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Summary

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic led to mental health fallout in the US; yet research about mental health and COVID-19 primarily rely on samples that may overlook variance in regional mental health. Between-city comparisons of mental health decline in the US may provide further insight into how the pandemic is disproportionately affecting at-risk groups. This study leverages social media and COVID-19-city infection data to measure the longitudinal (January 22- July 31, 2020) mental health effects of the COVID-19 pandemic in 20 metropolitan areas

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