Abstract

Research identifying adults’ mental health during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic relies solely on demographic predictors without examining adults’ health condition as a potential predictor. This study aims to examine individuals’ perception of health conditions and test availability as potential predictors of mental health—insomnia, anxiety, depression, and distress—during the COVID-19 pandemic. An online survey of 669 adults in Malaysia was conducted during 2–8 May 2020, six weeks after the Movement Control Order (MCO) was issued. We found adults’ perception of health conditions had curvilinear relationships (horizontally reversed J-shaped) with insomnia, anxiety, depression, and distress. Perceived test availability for COVID-19 also had curvilinear relationships (horizontally reversed J-shaped) with anxiety and depression. Younger adults reported worse mental health, but people from various religions and ethnic groups did not differ significantly in reported mental health. The results indicated that adults with worse health conditions had more mental health problems, and the worse degree deepened for unhealthy people. Perceived test availability negatively predicted anxiety and depression, especially for adults perceiving COVID-19 test unavailability. The significant predictions of perceived health condition and perceived COVID-19 test availability suggest a new direction for the literature to identify the psychiatric risk factors directly from health-related variables during a pandemic.

Highlights

  • In May 2020, the United Nations Secretary-General issued a message that the coronavirus disease2019 (COVID-19) pandemic had resulted in massive mental suffering and called for actions [1]

  • 669 adults from all the states and federal territories of Malaysia participated in this survey

  • This study identified adults’ perceived health conditions, perceived test availability, and age as the predictors of their insomnia, anxiety, depression, and distress during the COVID-19 pandemic

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Summary

Introduction

In May 2020, the United Nations Secretary-General issued a message that the coronavirus disease. 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic had resulted in massive mental suffering and called for actions [1]. Research is critically needed on mental health of patients, healthcare workers, and the general population during the COVID-19 pandemic. Anxiety, depression, and insomnia are relevant mental health disorders due to their prevalence during severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) and COVID-19 outbreaks [2,3,4,5]. A number of studies have predicted mental health by means of demographic variables [2,3,6], but little research has predicted mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic based on adults’ health-related variables. This study aims to examine individuals’ perception of health. Public Health 2020, 17, 5498; doi:10.3390/ijerph17155498 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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