Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic and its associated national lockdowns have been linked to deteriorations in mental health worldwide. A number of studies analysed changes in mental health indicators during the pandemic; however, these studies generally had a small number of timepoints, and focused on the initial months of the pandemic. Furthermore, most studies followed-up the same individuals, resulting in significant loss to follow-up and biased estimates of mental health and its change. Here we report on time trends in key mental health indicators amongst Danish adults over the course of the pandemic (March 2020 - July 2021) focusing on subgroups defined by gender, age, and self-reported previously diagnosed chronic and/or mental illness.MethodsWe used time-series data collected by Epinion (N=8,261) with 43 timepoints between 20 March 2020 and 22 July 2021. Using a repeated cross-sectional study design, independent sets of individuals were asked to respond to the Copenhagen Corona-Related Mental Health questionnaire at each timepoint, and data was weighted to population proportions. The six mental health indicators examined were loneliness, anxiety, social isolation, quality of life, COVID-19-related worries, and the mental health scale. Gender, age, and the presence of previously diagnosed mental and/or chronic illness were used to stratify the population into subgroups for comparisons.ResultsPoorer mental health were observed during the strictest phases of the lockdowns, whereas better outcomes occurred during reopening phases. Women, young individuals (<34 yrs), and those with a mental- and/or chronic illness demonstrated poorer mean time-series than others. Those with a pre-existing mental illness further had a less reactive mental health time-series. The greatest differences between women/men and younger/older age groups were observed during the second lockdown.ConclusionsPeople with mental illness have reported disadvantageous but stable levels of mental health indicators during the pandemic thus far, and they seem to be less affected by the factors that result in fluctuating time-series in other subgroups.

Highlights

  • On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the novel Coronavirus-Disease-2019 (COVID-19) a global pandemic [1]

  • The time-series were similar for loneliness, social isolation, COVID-19-related worries, and quality of life

  • For COVID-19-related worries, the worst levels over the entire course of the pandemic far were observed during the first lockdown (March – April 2020), while the worst levels of loneliness were observed during the second lockdown

Read more

Summary

Introduction

On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organization (WHO) declared the novel Coronavirus-Disease-2019 (COVID-19) a global pandemic [1]. Evidence indicated acute deteriorations in the mental health of populations in many countries following the initial lockdowns [10, 11]. As countries first began to reopen and/or restrictions were relaxed around May – July 2020, studies found that various mental health indicators simultaneously improved [5, 12, 13]. No high-resolution longitudinal or time-series studies have tracked multiple mental health indicators over the entire course of the COVID-19 pandemic. We report on time trends in key mental health indicators amongst Danish adults over the course of the pandemic (March 2020 - July 2021) focusing on subgroups defined by gender, age, and self-reported previously diagnosed chronic and/or mental illness

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call