Abstract

COVID-19, the most severe public health problem to occur in the past 10 years, has greatly impacted people's mental health. Colleges in China have reopened, and how to prevent college students from suffering secondary damage due to school reopening remains elusive. This cross-sectional study was aimed to evaluate the psychological impact of COVID-19 after school reopening and explore via machine learning the factors that influence anxiety and depression among students. Among the 478 valid online questionnaires collected between September 14th and September 20th, 74 (15.5%) showed symptoms of anxiety (by the Self-Rating Anxiety Scale), and 155 (32.4%) showed symptoms of depression (by Patient Health Questionnaire-9). Descriptive analysis of basic personal characteristics indicated that students at a higher grade, having relatives or friends who have been infected, fearing being infected, and having a pessimistic attitude to COVID-19 easily experience anxiety or depression. The Synthetic Minority Oversampling Technique (SMOTE) was utilized to counteract the imbalance of retrieved data. The Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) and multivariate logistic regression were performed to explore significant influence factors. The results indicate that exercise frequency, alcohol use, school reopening, having relatives or friends who have been infected, self-quarantine, quarantine of classmates, taking temperature routinely, wearing masks routinely, sleep quality, retaining holiday, availability of package delivery, take-out availability, lockdown restriction, several areas in school closed due to COVID-19, living conditions in the school, taking the final examinations after school reopening, and the degree to which family economic status is influenced by COVID-19 are the primary influence factors for anxiety or depression. To evaluate the effect of our model, we used 5-fold cross-validation, and the average area under the curve (AUC) values of the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves of anxiety and depression on the test set reached 0.885 and 0.806, respectively. To conclude, we examined the presence of anxiety and depression symptoms among Chinese college students after school reopening and explored many factors influencing students' mental health, providing reasonable school management suggestions.

Highlights

  • COVID-19, the most severe public health problem to occur in the past 10 years, has dramatically impacted the medical health service systems worldwide, causing 57,882,183 confirmed cases and 1,377,395 confirmed deaths up to 22 November 2020 (World Health Organization, 2020)

  • Cao et al performed a cross-sectional study in China and found that 0.9% of the respondents were experiencing severe anxiety, 2.7% were experiencing moderate anxiety, and 21.3% were experiencing mild anxiety (Cao et al, 2020)

  • Presence of Anxiety and Depression Symptoms. This survey’s response variables were anxiety and depression evaluated by Self-rating Anxiety Scale (SAS) and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), respectively

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Summary

Introduction

COVID-19 (coronavirus disease 2019), the most severe public health problem to occur in the past 10 years, has dramatically impacted the medical health service systems worldwide, causing 57,882,183 confirmed cases and 1,377,395 confirmed deaths up to 22 November 2020 (World Health Organization, 2020). It was first discovered in Wuhan, the Hubei province’s capital city, China, and rapidly spread to other regions (Guan et al, 2020a,b). Delivery services and free entry to the campus are no longer allowed

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