Abstract

In addition to being a public physical health emergency, Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) affected global mental health, as evidenced by panic-buying worldwide as cases soared. Little is known about changes in levels of psychological impact, stress, anxiety and depression during this pandemic. This longitudinal study surveyed the general population twice - during the initial outbreak, and the epidemic's peak four weeks later, surveying demographics, symptoms, knowledge, concerns, and precautionary measures against COVID-19. There were 1738 respondents from 190 Chinese cities (1210 first-survey respondents, 861 s-survey respondents; 333 respondents participated in both). Psychological impact and mental health status were assessed by the Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R) and the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-21), respectively. IES-R measures PTSD symptoms in survivorship after an event. DASS -21 is based on tripartite model of psychopathology that comprise a general distress construct with distinct characteristics. This study found that there was a statistically significant longitudinal reduction in mean IES-R scores (from 32.98 to 30.76, p < 0.01) after 4 weeks. Nevertheless, the mean IES-R score of the first- and second-survey respondents were above the cut-off scores (>24) for PTSD symptoms, suggesting that the reduction in scores was not clinically significant. During the initial evaluation, moderate-to-severe stress, anxiety and depression were noted in 8.1%, 28.8% and 16.5%, respectively and there were no significant longitudinal changes in stress, anxiety and depression levels (p > 0.05). Protective factors included high level of confidence in doctors, perceived survival likelihood and low risk of contracting COVID-19, satisfaction with health information, personal precautionary measures. As countries around the world brace for an escalation in cases, Governments should focus on effective methods of disseminating unbiased COVID-19 knowledge, teaching correct containment methods, ensuring availability of essential services/commodities, and providing sufficient financial support.

Keywords

AnxietyMental healthDepression (economics)Longitudinal studyPopulationPsychopathologyMedicinePandemicPsychiatryPsychologyClinical psychologyPanicDemographyDistressCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)DiseaseEnvironmental healthInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)

MeSH Terms

AdolescentAdultAnxietyBetacoronavirusCOVID-19ChildChinaCoronavirus InfectionsDepressionEpidemicsFemaleHand HygieneHealth BehaviorHumansInternet-Based InterventionLongitudinal StudiesMaleMasksMental HealthMiddle AgedPandemicsPneumoniaViralPsychotherapySARS-CoV-2Stress DisordersPost-TraumaticStressPsychologicalYoung Adult

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Publication Info

Year
2020
Type
article
Volume
87
Pages
40-48
Citations
2632
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

2632
OpenAlex
160
Influential
1919
CrossRef

Cite This

Cuiyan Wang, Riyu Pan, Xiaoyang Wan et al. (2020). A longitudinal study on the mental health of general population during the COVID-19 epidemic in China. Brain Behavior and Immunity , 87 , 40-48. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2020.04.028

Identifiers

DOI
10.1016/j.bbi.2020.04.028
PMID
32298802
PMCID
PMC7153528

Data Quality

Data completeness: 90%