Author:
Shaw Philip,Blizzard Sam,Shastri Gauri,Kundzicz Paul,Curtis Brenda,Ungar Lyle,Koehly Laura
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Recommendations for promoting mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic include maintaining social contact, through virtual rather than physical contact, moderating substance/alcohol use, and limiting news and media exposure. We seek to understand if these pandemic-related behaviors impact subsequent mental health.
Methods
Daily online survey data were collected on adults during May/June 2020. Measures were of daily physical and virtual (online) contact with others; substance and media use; and indices of psychological striving, struggling and COVID-related worry. Using random-intercept cross-lagged panel analysis, dynamic within-person cross-lagged effects were separated from more static individual differences.
Results
In total, 1148 participants completed daily surveys [657 (57.2%) females, 484 (42.1%) males; mean age 40.6 (s.d. 12.4) years]. Daily increases in news consumed increased COVID-related worrying the next day [cross-lagged estimate = 0.034 (95% CI 0.018–0.049), FDR-adjusted p = 0.00005] and vice versa [0.03 (0.012–0.048), FDR-adjusted p = 0.0017]. Increased media consumption also exacerbated subsequent psychological struggling [0.064 (0.03–0.098), FDR-adjusted p = 0.0005]. There were no significant cross-lagged effects of daily changes in social distancing or virtual contact on later mental health.
Conclusions
We delineate a cycle wherein a daily increase in media consumption results in a subsequent increase in COVID-related worries, which in turn increases daily media consumption. Moreover, the adverse impact of news extended to broader measures of psychological struggling. A similar dynamic did not unfold between the daily amount of physical or virtual contact and subsequent mental health. Findings are consistent with current recommendations to moderate news and media consumption in order to promote mental health.
Funder
National Human Genome Research Institute
Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Reference29 articles.
1. Mental health and well-being during the COVID-19 pandemic: Longitudinal analyses of adults in the UK COVID-19 mental health and wellbeing study;O'Connor;British Journal of Psychiatry,2020
2. WHO (2020) Mental health and psychosocial considerations during the COVID-19 outbreak. Retrieved from https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/WHO-2019-nCoV-MentalHealth-2020.1.
3. Mental health before and during the COVID-19 pandemic in two longitudinal UK population cohorts;Kwong;British Journal of Psychiatry,2020
4. Fear of COVID-19 and the mental health consequences in America.
5. COVID-19 and Racial/Ethnic Disparities
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献