The Moderating Role of Anxiety and Depressive Symptoms in Protective Effects of Health Behaviors among Clients Using Mental Health Services

Author:

Zhai Yusen1ORCID,Almaawali Mahmood2ORCID,Du Xue3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Human Studies, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA

2. Psychology Department, Sultan Qaboos University, Al-Khod 123, Oman

3. Heersink School of Medicine, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL 35294, USA

Abstract

College-student clients using mental health services contend with increased anxiety and depressive symptoms, and their vulnerability to infectious respiratory diseases and severe clinical outcomes rises. To mitigate severe outcomes, health behaviors serve as essential protective tools to reduce the risk of infectious diseases, including COVID-19. Considering the escalating prevalence of anxiety and depression among college-student clients, little is known about how anxiety and depressive symptoms could potentially attenuate the protective effects of COVID-19 health behaviors (i.e., masking, social distancing, and hygiene practice). This study aims to examine the interactive effects of anxiety/depression and health behaviors in predicting COVID-19 infection. Methods: We analyzed data from the 2020–2021 Healthy Mind Study including a random sample of 9884 college-student clients in mental health services across 140 higher education institutions in the United States. We performed multivariable logistic regression to assess whether and to what extent the associations between COVID-19 health behaviors and infection depended on severity of anxiety or depressive symptoms. Results: Anxiety symptom severity negatively moderated the protective effects of social distancing against infection after adjusting for demographic characteristics and pre-existing chronic health conditions. Depressive symptom severity negatively moderated the protective effects of masking, social distancing, or hygiene practices against infection. Conclusion: The associations between certain COVID-19 health behaviors and infection were conditional on anxiety and depressive symptom severity. Findings suggest a potential public health benefit of mental health clinicians’ efforts in assessing and treating clients’ anxiety and depressive symptoms, namely reducing their vulnerability to COVID-19 infection and perhaps other infectious respiratory diseases.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference50 articles.

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2. Our World in Data (2024, February 26). Coronavirus (COVID-19) Vaccinations. Available online: https://ourworldindata.org/covid-vaccinations.

3. Provisional mortality data—United States, 2022;Ahmad;Morb. Mortal. Wkly. Rep.,2023

4. The National Institutes of Health (2023, August 10). NIH’s COVID-19 Response, Available online: https://covid19.nih.gov/nih-strategic-response-COVID-19.

5. COVID-19-related mortality risk in people with severe mental illness: A systematic and critical review;Mazereel;Front. Psychiatry,2022

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