作者
Cindy B Veldhuis, Elizabeth D Nesoff, Anna Laura W McKowen, Dylan R Rice, Hana Ghoneima, Angie R Wootton, Elizabeth Lerner Papautsky, Danielle Arigo, Shoshona Goldberg, Jocelyn C Anderson
发表日期
2021/5/1
期刊
Preventive Medicine
卷号
146
页码范围
106465
出版商
Academic Press
简介
Despite the large amounts of research currently being conducted and the high number of editorials warning about the potential mental health impacts, there is a stunning lack of longitudinal mental health data on the effects of the pandemic. Yet, the pandemic may have sizable long-term impacts on psychological distress and health behaviors—these effects may be long-lasting and may disproportionately affect some demographic groups more than others. Data came from a longitudinal international study of the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on adults' psychological distress and wellbeing (N = 1567). We found high rates of depression (55% were diagnosable with probable depression at baseline), anxiety (65%), and risk for PTSD (51%). More than one-third of participants who reported that they drank alcohol indicated that their drinking had increased since the start of the pandemic. Over time, depressive …
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