Somatic burden in Russia during the COVID-19 pandemic

Author:

Zolotareva AlenaORCID,Khegay Anna,Voevodina Elena,Kritsky Igor,Ibragimov Roman,Nizovskih Nina,Konstantinov VsevolodORCID,Malenova ArinaORCID,Belasheva Irina,Khodyreva Natalia,Preobrazhensky VladimirORCID,Azanova Kristina,Sarapultseva Lilia,Galimova Almira,Atamanova InnaORCID,Kulik Anastasia,Neyaskina Yulia,Lapshin MaksimORCID,Mamonova Marina,Kadyrov Ruslan,Volkova Ekaterina,Drachkova Viktoria,Seryy Andrey,Kosheleva Natalia,Osin Evgeny

Abstract

Somatic burden has become one of the most common psychological reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic worldwide. This study examined the prevalence of somatic burden, latent profiles, and associated factors of somatic symptoms during the pandemic in a large sample of Russians. We used cross-sectional data from 10,205 Russians collected during October-December, 2021. Prevalence of somatic burden was assessed with the Somatic Symptom Scale-8. Latent profiles of somatic burden were identified using latent profile analysis. Multinomial logistic regression was used to examine demographic, socioeconomic, and psychological associated factors of somatic burden. Over one-third (37%) of the Russians reported being somatised. We selected the three-latent profile solution with high somatic burden profile (16%), medium somatic burden profile (37%), and low somatic burden profile (47%). The associated factors of greater somatic burden were female gender, lower education, history of COVID-19 disease, refusing vaccination against SARS-CoV-2 infection, poorer self-rated health, greater fear of COVID-19 pandemic, and living in regions with higher excess mortality. Overall, this study contributes to knowledge about the prevalence, latent profiles, and associated factors of somatic burden during the COVID-19 pandemic. It can be useful to researchers in psychosomatic medicine and practitioners in the health care system.

Funder

HSE University Basic Research Program

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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