Anxiety and Depression during the Second Wave of the COVID-19 Pandemic: The Role of Coping Strategies

Author:

Miola Alessandro123,Caiolo Stefano24,Pontoni Giancarlo5ORCID,Pozzan Erica2,Moriglia Chiara6,Simionato Filippo2,Garofalo Sergio4,Perini Giulia123,Sambataro Fabio12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neuroscience (DNS), Padua Neuroscience Center, University of Padova, 35127 Padua, Italy

2. Medicine Faculty, University of Padova, 35127 Padua, Italy

3. Casa di Cura Parco dei Tigli, 35037 Teolo, Italy

4. Psychiatry Section, Military Department of Forensic Medicine, 35137 Padua, Italy

5. Psychiatry Section, Psychophysiological Selection Office, Italian Army National Recruitment and Selection Center, 06034 Foligno, Italy

6. Psyops Development Center, 28th (APICE) Regiment “Pavia”, 61121 Pesaro, Italy

Abstract

Background: Evidence suggests increased anxious-depressive symptoms in the general population during the COVID-19 pandemic, also in its second wave. High symptom variability across individuals suggests that risk and protective factors, including coping strategies, can play a mediating role. Methods: General Anxiety Disorder-7, Patient Health Questionnaire-9, and Brief-COPE questionnaires were administered to people attending a COVID-19 point-of-care. Univariate and multivariate methods were used to test the association of symptoms with risk and protective factors. Results: A total of 3509 participants (27.5% with moderate-severe anxiety; 12% with depressive symptoms) were recruited. Sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, including age, sex, sleep, physical activity, psychiatric treatments, parenthood, employment, and religiosity were associated with affective symptoms. Avoidant (self-distraction, venting, behavioral disengagement) and approach (emotional support, self-blame but not positive reframing and acceptance) coping strategies predicted greater anxiety. Avoidant strategies, including venting, denial, behavioral disengagement, substance use, and self-blame, and the humor strategy were associated with more severe depressive symptoms, while the planning predicted the opposite. Conclusions: Coping strategies, in addition to socio-demographic and life-habit factors, could have contributed to modulating anxious and depressive symptoms during the second-wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, thus advocating for interventions aimed at promoting positive coping strategies to reduce the psychosocial toll of the pandemic.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference73 articles.

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