Contribution of risk and resilience factors to anxiety trajectories during the early stages of the COVID‐19 pandemic: A longitudinal study

Author:

Shilton Tal1,Mancini Anthony D.2,Perlstein Samantha3,DiDomenico Grace E.4ORCID,Visoki Elina4,Greenberg David M.5,Brown Lily A.6,Gur Ruben C.46,Gur Raquel E.46,Waller Rebecca E.3,Barzilay Ran467ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sheba Medical Centre Child Adolescent Psychiatry Division Tel Aviv University Sackler School of Medicine Tel Aviv Israel

2. Department of Psychology Pace University Pleasantville New York USA

3. Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

4. Lifespan Brain Institute Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) and Penn Medicine Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

5. Bar Ilan University Ramat Gan Israel

6. Perelman School of Medicine Department of Psychiatry University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

7. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

Abstract

AbstractThe COVID‐19 pandemic, and the response of governments to mitigate the pandemic's spread, resulted in exceptional circumstances that comprised a major global stressor, with broad implications for mental health. We aimed to delineate anxiety trajectories over three time‐points in the first 6 months of the pandemic and identify baseline risk and resilience factors that predicted anxiety trajectories. Within weeks of the pandemic onset, we established a website (covid19resilience.org), and enrolled 1362 participants (n = 1064 from US; n = 222 from Israel) who provided longitudinal data between April–September 2020. We used latent growth mixture modelling to identify anxiety trajectories and ran multivariate regression models to compare characteristics between trajectory classes. A four‐class model best fit the data, including a resilient trajectory (stable low anxiety) the most common (n = 961, 75.08%), and chronic anxiety (n = 149, 11.64%), recovery (n = 96, 7.50%) and delayed anxiety (n = 74, 5.78%) trajectories. Resilient participants were older, not living alone, with higher income, more education, and reported fewer COVID‐19 worries and better sleep quality. Higher resilience factors' scores, specifically greater emotion regulation and lower conflict relationships, also uniquely distinguished the resilient trajectory. Results are consistent with the pre‐pandemic resilience literature suggesting that most individuals show stable mental health in the face of stressful events. Findings can inform preventative interventions for improved mental health.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

United States-Israel Binational Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine

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