Psychological consequences of COVID-19 home confinement: The ECLB-COVID19 multicenter study
Author:
Ammar AchrafORCID, Mueller Patrick, Trabelsi Khaled, Chtourou Hamdi, Boukhris Omar, Masmoudi Liwa, Bouaziz Bassem, Brach Michael, Schmicker Marlen, Bentlage Ellen, How Daniella, Ahmed Mona, Aloui Asma, Hammouda Omar, Paineiras-Domingos Laisa Liane, Braakman-jansen Annemarie, Wrede Christian, Bastoni Sophia, Pernambuco Carlos Soares, Mataruna-Dos-Santos Leonardo Jose, Taheri Morteza, Irandoust Khadijeh, Khacharem Aïmen, Bragazzi Nicola L., Adrian Washif Jad, Glenn Jordan M., Bott Nicholas T., Gargouri Faiez, Chaari Lotfi, Batatia Hadj, khoshnami Samira C., Samara Evangelia, Zisi Vasiliki, Sankar Parasanth, Ahmed Waseem N., Ali Gamal Mohamed, Abdelkarim Osama, Jarraya Mohamed, El Abed Kais, Romdhani Mohamed, Souissi Nizar, Van Gemert-Pijnen Lisette, Bailey Stephen J., Moalla Wassim, Gómez-Raja Jonathan, Epstein Monique, Sanderman Robbert, Schulz Sebastian, Jerg Achim, Al-Horani Ramzi, Mansi Taysir, Jmail Mohamed, Barbosa Fernando, Ferreira-Santos Fernando, Šimunič Boštjan, Pišot Rado, Gaggioli Andrea, Zmijewski Piotr, Steinacker Jürgen M., Strahler Jana, Riemann Laurel, Riemann Bryan L., Mueller Notger, Chamari Karim, Driss Tarak, Hoekelmann Anita,
Abstract
Background
Public health recommendations and government measures during the COVID-19 pandemic have enforced restrictions on daily-living. While these measures are imperative to abate the spreading of COVID-19, the impact of these restrictions on mental health and emotional wellbeing is undefined. Therefore, an international online survey (ECLB-COVID19) was launched on April 6, 2020 in seven languages to elucidate the impact of COVID-19 restrictions on mental health and emotional wellbeing.
Methods
The ECLB-COVID19 electronic survey was designed by a steering group of multidisciplinary scientists, following a structured review of the literature. The survey was uploaded and shared on the Google online-survey-platform and was promoted by thirty-five research organizations from Europe, North-Africa, Western-Asia and the Americas. All participants were asked for their mental wellbeing (SWEMWS) and depressive symptoms (SMFQ) with regard to “during” and “before” home confinement.
Results
Analysis was conducted on the first 1047 replies (54% women) from Asia (36%), Africa (40%), Europe (21%) and other (3%). The COVID-19 home confinement had a negative effect on both mental-wellbeing and on mood and feelings. Specifically, a significant decrease (p < .001 and Δ% = 9.4%) in total score of the SWEMWS questionnaire was noted. More individuals (+12.89%) reported a low mental wellbeing “during” compared to “before” home confinement. Furthermore, results from the mood and feelings questionnaire showed a significant increase by 44.9% (p < .001) in SMFQ total score with more people (+10%) showing depressive symptoms “during” compared to “before” home confinement.
Conclusion
The ECLB-COVID19 survey revealed an increased psychosocial strain triggered by the home confinement. To mitigate this high risk of mental disorders and to foster an Active and Healthy Confinement Lifestyle (AHCL), a crisis-oriented interdisciplinary intervention is urgently needed.
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Subject
Multidisciplinary
Reference46 articles.
1. EDCD. Situation update worldwide, as of 19 April 2020. https://www.ecdc.europa.eu/en/geographical-distribution-2019-ncov-cases. Retrieved 19 April 2020. (Retrieved 19 April 2020) 2. Mental health outcomes of quarantine and isolation for infection prevention: A systematic umbrella review of the global evidence. 2020;MM Hossain;SSRN Electronic Journal 3. Staying physically active during the quarantine and self-isolation period for controlling and mitigating the COVID-19 pandemics: An overview;H Chtourou;Frontiers in Psychology,2020 4. Mental Health and the Covid-19 Pandemic;B. Pfefferbaum;N. Engl. J. Med,2020
Cited by
206 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|