The network structure of psychopathological and resilient responses to the pandemic: A multicountry general population study of depression and anxiety

Author:

Contreras Alba12ORCID,Butter Sarah3ORCID,Granziol Umberto4ORCID,Panzeri Anna4ORCID,Peinado Vanesa2ORCID,Trucharte Almudena25ORCID,Zavlis Orestis6ORCID,Valiente Carmen2ORCID,Vázquez Carmelo2ORCID,Murphy Jamie3ORCID,Bertamini Marco7ORCID,Shevlin Mark3ORCID,Hartman Todd K.8ORCID,Bruno Giovanni4ORCID,Mignemi Giuseppe4ORCID,Spoto Andrea4ORCID,Vidotto Giulio4ORCID,Bentall Richard P.6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological and Health Psychology, Area of Personality, Assessment and Clinical intervention University Autonoma of Madrid Madrid Spain

2. Department of Personality Assessment and Clinical Psychology University Complutense of Madrid Madrid Spain

3. School of Psychology Ulster University Coleraine Northern Ireland UK

4. Department of General Psychology University of Padua Padua Italy

5. Department of Psychology Faculty of Health Camilo Jose Cela University Madrid Spain

6. Clinical Psychology Unit Department of Psychology University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

7. Faculty of Health & Life Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UK

8. School of Social Science University of Manchester Manchester UK

Abstract

AbstractCommonly identified patterns of psychological distress in response to adverse events are characterized by resilience (i.e., little to no distress), delayed (i.e., distress that increases over time), recovery (i.e., distress followed by a gradual decrease over time), and sustained (i.e., distress remaining stable over time). This study aimed to examine these response patterns during the COVID‐19 pandemic. Anxiety and depressive symptom data collected across four European countries over the first year of the pandemic were analyzed (N = 3,594). Participants were first categorized into groups based on the four described patterns. Network connectivity and symptom clustering were then estimated for each group and compared. Two thirds (63.6%) of the sample displayed a resilience pattern. The sustained distress network (16.3%) showed higher connectivity than the recovery network (10.0%) group, p = .031; however, the resilient network showed higher connectivity than the delayed network (10.1%) group, p = .016. Regarding symptom clustering, more clusters emerged in the recovery network (i.e., three) than the sustained network (i.e., two). These results replicate findings that resilience was the most common mental health pattern over the first pandemic year. Moreover, they suggest that high network connectivity may be indicative of a stable mental health response over time, whereas fewer clusters may be indicative of a sustained distress pattern. Although exploratory, the network perspective provides a useful tool for examining the complexity of psychological responses to adverse events and, if replicated, could be useful in identifying indicators of protection against or vulnerability to future psychological distress.

Funder

Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology

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