Author:
Leung Owen N. W.,Chiu Nicholas K. H.,Wong Samuel Y. S.,Cuijpers Pim,Alonso Jordi,Chan Paul K. S.,Lui Grace,Wong Eliza,Bruffaerts Ronny,Yip Benjamin H. K.,Mortier Philippe,Vilagut Gemma,Kwok Dora,Lam Linda C. W.,Kessler Ronald C.,Mak Arthur D. P.
Abstract
AbstractThis study examined the latent structure of the broad range of complex neuropsychiatric morbidities occurring 1 year after COVID-19 infection. As part of the CU-COVID19 study, 248 (response rate=39.3%) of 631 adults hospitalized for COVID-19 infection in Hong Kong completed an online survey between March-2021 and January-2022. Disorder prevalence was compared against a random non-infected household sample (n=1834). 248 surveys were received on average 321 days post-infection (Mean age: 48.9, 54% female, moderate/severe/critical infection: 58.2%). 32.4% were screened to have at least one mental disorder, 78.7% of whom had concurrent fatigue/subjective cognitive impairment (SCI). Only PTSD (19.1%) was significantly more common than control (14%, p=0.047). Latent profile analysis classified individuals into P1 (12·4%)-no current neuropsychiatric morbidities, P2 (23.1%)-SCI/fatigue, P3 (45.2%)-anxiety/PTSD, P4 (19.3%)-depression. SCI and fatigue pervaded in all profiles (P2-4) with neuropsychiatric morbidities one-year post-infection. PTSD, anxiety and depressive symptoms were most important in differentiating P2-4. Past mental health and P4 independently predicted functional impairment. Neuropsychiatric morbidity was associated with past mental health, reduced resilience, financial problems, but not COVID-19 severity. Their confluence with depressive and anxiety symptoms predicted impairment and are associated with psychological and environmental factors.
Funder
AGAUR, Generalitat de Catalunya
Health and Medical Research Fund
the Special Research Fund KULeuven
Instituto de Salud Carlos III
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
2 articles.
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