Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on mental health: An international study

Author:

Gloster Andrew T.ORCID,Lamnisos Demetris,Lubenko JelenaORCID,Presti GiovambattistaORCID,Squatrito ValeriaORCID,Constantinou Marios,Nicolaou Christiana,Papacostas Savvas,Aydın Gökçen,Chong Yuen YuORCID,Chien Wai Tong,Cheng Ho Yu,Ruiz Francisco J.,Garcia-Martin Maria B.,Obando-Posada Diana P.,Segura-Vargas Miguel A.,Vasiliou Vasilis S.,McHugh Louise,Höfer Stefan,Baban Adriana,Dias Neto David,Nunes da Silva Ana,Monestès Jean-Louis,Alvarez-Galvez Javier,Paez-Blarrina Marisa,Montesinos Francisco,Valdivia-Salas Sonsoles,Ori DorottyaORCID,Kleszcz Bartosz,Lappalainen Raimo,Ivanović Iva,Gosar DavidORCID,Dionne Frederick,Merwin Rhonda M.,Kassianos Angelos P.ORCID,Karekla MariaORCID

Abstract

Background The COVID-19 pandemic triggered vast governmental lockdowns. The impact of these lockdowns on mental health is inadequately understood. On the one hand such drastic changes in daily routines could be detrimental to mental health. On the other hand, it might not be experienced negatively, especially because the entire population was affected. Methods The aim of this study was to determine mental health outcomes during pandemic induced lockdowns and to examine known predictors of mental health outcomes. We therefore surveyed n = 9,565 people from 78 countries and 18 languages. Outcomes assessed were stress, depression, affect, and wellbeing. Predictors included country, sociodemographic factors, lockdown characteristics, social factors, and psychological factors. Results Results indicated that on average about 10% of the sample was languishing from low levels of mental health and about 50% had only moderate mental health. Importantly, three consistent predictors of mental health emerged: social support, education level, and psychologically flexible (vs. rigid) responding. Poorer outcomes were most strongly predicted by a worsening of finances and not having access to basic supplies. Conclusions These results suggest that on whole, respondents were moderately mentally healthy at the time of a population-wide lockdown. The highest level of mental health difficulties were found in approximately 10% of the population. Findings suggest that public health initiatives should target people without social support and those whose finances worsen as a result of the lockdown. Interventions that promote psychological flexibility may mitigate the impact of the pandemic.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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