COVID-19 和英国自闭症及其他神经变异成人对生活质量、焦虑、抑郁和孤独感的感知变化。

Simone J Capp, David Mason, Emma Colvert, Jessica Agnew-Blais, Francesca Happé
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在英国,我们的日常生活因 COVID-19 而发生了许多变化。自闭症患者和其他神经分裂症患者(ND,如注意力缺陷多动障碍患者)可能更容易受到大流行病的负面影响,因为他们之前就存在心理健康方面的差异,而且他们的支持需求也未得到满足。此外,无论是与大流行病相关的研究还是其他方面的研究,很少有研究考虑到具有额外交叉 ND 身份的自闭症成年人的经历与没有交叉 ND 身份的成年人的经历有何不同:我们收集了 2020 年 6 月至 2020 年 9 月期间在线调查的数据,以探讨冠状病毒大流行对英国成年人(N = 286,年龄 18-72 岁)的心理影响。参与者包括神经畸形(NT)成人(98 人)、自闭症成人(73 人)、其他 ND 成人(53 人)以及具有额外交叉 ND 身份的自闭症成人(63 人)。我们测量并比较了不同群体的生活质量(QoL)、抑郁、焦虑和孤独感水平,以及这些方面因大流行病而发生的感知变化:与 NT 成年人相比,患有或未患有 ND 的自闭症成年人的 QoL 一直较低,焦虑、抑郁和孤独感较高。我们发现,在这些方面,有和没有额外 ND 多重身份的自闭症成人之间没有差异。在某些方面,非自闭症 ND 参与者的表现也不如他们的 NT 同龄人。许多参与者认为他们的生活质量、心理健康和孤独感因大流行病而恶化,不同群体的情况大致相同:这些结果表明,COVID-19 可能导致英国成年人对心理健康服务的需求增加。自闭症成人和玖玖成人可能都特别需要增加(和改善)心理健康和福祉支持。这可能是由于心理健康和幸福感方面预先存在的差异,以及个人因大流行病而面临进一步的困难。
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COVID-19 and Perceived Changes to Quality of Life, Anxiety, Depression, and Loneliness in Autistic and Other Neurodivergent U.K. Adults.

Background: In the United Kingdom, we have experienced many changes to our daily lives as a result of COVID-19. Autistic and other neurodivergent (ND, e.g., those with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder) adults may be more vulnerable to negative effects of the pandemic due to pre-existing mental health disparities and unmet support needs. Furthermore, there is little research, either pandemic related or otherwise, which considers how the experiences of autistic adults with additional intersecting ND identities might differ from those without.

Methods: We collected data from an online survey during June 2020 to September 2020 to explore the psychological impact of the coronavirus pandemic on U.K. adults (N = 286, age 18-72 years). Participants included neurotypical (NT) adults (N = 98), autistic adults (N = 73), other ND adults (N = 53), as well as autistic adults with an additional intersecting ND identity (N = 63). We measured and compared levels of quality of life (QoL), depression, anxiety, and loneliness across groups as well as perceived change in these as a result of the pandemic.

Results: Autistic adults, with and without additional ND identities, had consistently low QoL and high anxiety, depression, and loneliness compared with NT adults. We found no differences in these areas between autistic adults with and without additional intersecting ND identities. In some areas, non-autistic ND participants were also doing poorly compared with their NT peers. Many participants felt that their QoL, mental health, and loneliness had worsened due to the pandemic, and this was largely similar across groups.

Conclusions: These results highlight that COVID-19 may have led to increased need and demand for mental health services across the U.K. adult population. Both autistic and ND adults may be in particular need of increased (and improved) mental health and well-being support. This is likely because of pre-existing differences in mental health and well-being as well as individuals facing further difficulties as a result of the pandemic.

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