Anxiety and behavioral changes in Japanese patients with inflammatory bowel disease due to COVID-19 pandemic: a national survey

Author:

Nakase HiroshiORCID,Wagatsuma Kohei,Nojima Masanori,Matsumoto Takayuki,Matsuura Minoru,Iijima Hideki,Matsuoka Katsuyoshi,Ohmiya Naoki,Ishihara Shunji,Hirai Fumihito,Takeuchi Ken,Tamura Satoshi,Kinjo Fukunori,Ueno Nobuhiro,Naganuma Makoto,Watanabe Kenji,Moroi Rintaro,Nishimata Nobuaki,Motoya Satoshi,Kurahara Koichi,Takahashi Sakuma,Maemoto Atsuo,Sakuraba Hirotake,Saruta Masayuki,Tominaga Keiichi,Hisabe Takashi,Tanaka Hiroki,Terai Shuji,Hiraoka Sakiko,Takedomi Hironobu,Narimatsu Kazuyuki,Endo Katsuya,Nakamura Masanao,Hisamatsu Tadakazu

Abstract

Abstract Background Given the increasing health concerns for patients with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), amidst the COVID-19 pandemic, we investigated the impact of the pandemic on the anxiety and behavioral changes in Japanese patients with IBD. Methods We analyzed 3032 questionnaires from patients with IBD, aged 16 years or older visiting 30 hospitals and 1 clinic between March 2020 and June 2021. The primary outcome was the score of the anxiety experienced by patients with IBD during the pandemic. Results Participants reported a median age of 44 years; 43.3% of the patients were women. Moreover, 60.6% and 39.4% were diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease, respectively, with a median disease duration of 10 years. Participants indicated an average of disease-related anxiety score of 5.1 ± 2.5 on a ten-point scale, with a tendency to increase, 1 month after the number of infected persons per population increased. The top three causes for anxiety were the risk of contracting COVID-19 during hospital visits, SARS-CoV-2 infection due to IBD, and infection by IBD medication. Factors associated with anxiety were gender (women), being a homemaker, hospital visit timings, mode of transportation (train), use of immunosuppressive drugs, and nutritional therapy. Most patients continued attending their scheduled hospital visits, taking their medications, experienced the need for a family doctor, and sought guidance and information regarding COVID-19 from primary doctors, television, and Internet news. Conclusions Patients with IBD experienced moderate disease-related anxiety due to the pandemic and should be proactively informed about infectious diseases to relieve their anxiety.

Funder

Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Gastroenterology

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