{"title":"COVID-19 Pandemic and the Impact of Quarantine on Mental Health of Adult Population","authors":"G. Ghimire, K. Gharti, A. Poudel","doi":"10.3126/paj.v5i1.45041","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"A new infectious disease known as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is posing a serious public health threat worldwide. Isolation and quarantine are two important public measures to prevent transmission of coronavirus from one person to another. A new environment, a departure from loved ones, and insecurity over disease status in quarantine can aggravate mental health problems. The study was descriptive cross-sectional that covered 305 adult populations of Rupa Rural Municipality, Kaski to determine the impact of quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic in relation to their mental health. The researcher used the self-reporting DASS-21 to collect the data through a web-based google form questionnaire from 1 September 2020 to 1 October 2020. The study demonstrated that 60.7 percent of respondents were below 35 years of with mean age of 33.92 years with a standard deviation of 11.702 and exercise was done by 53.1 percent of respondents. The study also revealed that 95.1 percent of respondents were up to date regarding the COVID 19 trend in Nepal mostly through a social network (37.9%). Among the quarantined group, 24.9 percent, 20 percent and 1.2 percent had depression, anxiety and stress respectively whereas among non-quarantined respondents, 5.7 percent had depression, 12.9 percent had anxiety and 1.4 percent had stress. Binary logistic regression resulted in the odds for respondents with depression who did not do physical exercise are 0.27 (95% CI for OR: 0.115-0.645) and the odds for female respondents are 0.219 (95% CI for OR: 0.08-0.595) with anxiety among the quarantined group. The study concluded that the negative impact on quarantined respondents' mental health was higher than that of the non-quarantined respondents. Hence, a psychological counseling using virtual techniques should be offered especially for those under quarantine, which would comfort them and follow-up care as well as mental health services that can be provided as necessary.","PeriodicalId":429477,"journal":{"name":"Prithvi Academic Journal","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-05-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Prithvi Academic Journal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3126/paj.v5i1.45041","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
A new infectious disease known as coronavirus disease (COVID-19) is posing a serious public health threat worldwide. Isolation and quarantine are two important public measures to prevent transmission of coronavirus from one person to another. A new environment, a departure from loved ones, and insecurity over disease status in quarantine can aggravate mental health problems. The study was descriptive cross-sectional that covered 305 adult populations of Rupa Rural Municipality, Kaski to determine the impact of quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic in relation to their mental health. The researcher used the self-reporting DASS-21 to collect the data through a web-based google form questionnaire from 1 September 2020 to 1 October 2020. The study demonstrated that 60.7 percent of respondents were below 35 years of with mean age of 33.92 years with a standard deviation of 11.702 and exercise was done by 53.1 percent of respondents. The study also revealed that 95.1 percent of respondents were up to date regarding the COVID 19 trend in Nepal mostly through a social network (37.9%). Among the quarantined group, 24.9 percent, 20 percent and 1.2 percent had depression, anxiety and stress respectively whereas among non-quarantined respondents, 5.7 percent had depression, 12.9 percent had anxiety and 1.4 percent had stress. Binary logistic regression resulted in the odds for respondents with depression who did not do physical exercise are 0.27 (95% CI for OR: 0.115-0.645) and the odds for female respondents are 0.219 (95% CI for OR: 0.08-0.595) with anxiety among the quarantined group. The study concluded that the negative impact on quarantined respondents' mental health was higher than that of the non-quarantined respondents. Hence, a psychological counseling using virtual techniques should be offered especially for those under quarantine, which would comfort them and follow-up care as well as mental health services that can be provided as necessary.
一种被称为冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的新型传染病正在全球范围内构成严重的公共卫生威胁。隔离和检疫是防止冠状病毒人际传播的两项重要公共措施。新的环境、与亲人的分离以及对隔离期间疾病状况的不安全感会加剧心理健康问题。该研究是描述性横断面研究,涵盖了卡斯基Rupa农村市的305名成年人,以确定COVID-19大流行期间隔离对他们心理健康的影响。从2020年9月1日到2020年10月1日,研究人员使用自我报告的DASS-21通过基于网络的谷歌表格问卷收集数据。调查结果显示,60.7%的受访者年龄在35岁以下,平均年龄为33.92岁,标准差为11.702岁,53.1%的受访者进行了锻炼。调查还显示,95.1%的受访者(37.9%)主要通过社交网络了解尼泊尔的新冠疫情动态。在被隔离的人群中,分别有24.9%、20%和1.2%的人患有抑郁症、焦虑和压力,而在未被隔离的受访者中,5.7%的人患有抑郁症,12.9%的人患有焦虑症,1.4%的人患有压力。二元逻辑回归结果显示,在被隔离组中,不进行体育锻炼的抑郁症受访者的几率为0.27 (95% CI OR: 0.115-0.645),女性受访者焦虑的几率为0.219 (95% CI OR: 0.08-0.595)。研究得出结论,被隔离的受访者对心理健康的负面影响高于未被隔离的受访者。因此,应特别针对被隔离者提供虚拟技术的心理咨询,安慰他们,并根据需要提供后续护理和心理健康服务。