COVID-19 infection associated with poorer mental health in a representative population sample
Loading...
Date
Authors
Batterham, Phil
Dawel, Amy
Shou, Yiyun
Gulliver, Amelia
Cherbuin, Nicolas
Calear, Alison
Farrer, Lou
Monaghan, Conal
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Objective
There is limited evidence of the direct effects of COVID-19 infection on mental health, and whether these are influenced by vaccination or physical health symptoms. We aimed to investigate the relationships of COVID-19 infection, current symptom presentation, and vaccination status with mental health symptoms in adults.
Study design and setting
A cross-sectional sample of the Australian adult population that was representative by age, gender, and location was recruited through market research panels (N = 1407, 51.3% female, mean age 47.9 years). Hierarchical regression analyses were used to examine the associations of COVID-19 infection history and current COVID-19 symptoms with symptoms of depression (Patient Health Questionnaire-9), generalized anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7) and social anxiety (Mini-Social Phobia Inventory).
Results
COVID-19 infection was associated with significantly higher depression and anxiety symptoms, but only in those who were not fully vaccinated. Current experience of COVID-related symptoms was associated with significantly higher depression and anxiety symptoms, and attenuated the direct effect of infection on mental health outcomes to non-significance.
Conclusion
COVID-19 infection may be associated with increased mental health symptoms. However, the effects of infection on mental health were primarily evident in those who were not fully vaccinated and were explained by greater physical health problems associated with COVID-19 infection. The findings reinforce the efficacy of vaccination for reducing physical and mental health symptoms following infection.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Journal of Psychosomatic Research
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution licence
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description