感染期间健康和功能协作成果研究(COH-FIT):从多变量和网络分析中揭示 COVID-19 大流行期间福祉和心理健康的可调节和不可调节风险和保护因素

IF 6.1 2区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY European Neuropsychopharmacology Pub Date : 2024-09-27 DOI:10.1016/j.euroneuro.2024.07.010
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在 COVID-19 大流行之前/期间,尚无多国/多语言研究对不可调节/可调节因素与经过验证的福祉/多维心理健康结果之间的先验多变量关联进行测试。此外,COVID-19 大流行期间的研究一般不报告代表性/加权非概率样本。感染期间健康与功能协作结果研究(COH-FIT)是一项多国/多语言调查,采用多变量/LASSO 规则化回归模型和网络分析,以确定与幸福感(WHO-5)/综合精神病理学(P-score)变化相关的可修正/不可修正因素。该研究招募了具有代表性的普通人群/加权非概率样本(2020 年 4 月 26 日至 2022 年 6 月 19 日)。参与者包括121,066名成年人(年龄=42±15.9岁,女性=64%,代表性样本=29%),他们的WHO-5/P-score恶化(SMD=0.53/SMD=0.74),尤其是在大流行期间的初期。我们为 WHO-5 确定了 15 个可改变/9 个不可改变的风险因素和 13 个可改变/3 个不可改变的保护因素,为 P-score 确定了 16 个可改变/11 个不可改变的风险因素和 10 个可改变/6 个不可改变的保护因素。就不可改变因素而言,中心度最高的 12 个共同风险/保护因素(网络分析)是:国家收入、种族、年龄、性别、教育程度、精神障碍史、COVID-19 相关限制、城市化程度、躯体疾病史、家庭房间数量和绿地以及社会经济地位。在可改变因素方面,我们确定了药物、学习、互联网、宠物饲养、工作和宗教等应对策略,以及大流行前的压力、恐惧、电视、社交媒体或阅读时间和 COVID-19 信息水平。在多变量模型中,对于 WHO-5,收入损失、COVID-19 死亡等额外的非可改变因素为|B|>1。对于可调节因素,我们确定了大流行前的社会功能水平、兴趣爱好、挫折感和孤独感以及作为应对策略的社会交往。就 P 值而言,其他不可调节/可调节因素包括收入损失、大流行前的感染恐惧以及作为应对策略的社会交往。COH-FIT 确定了在危机时期保护福祉/心理健康的脆弱亚人群和可操作的个人/环境因素。研究结果为公共卫生政策和临床实践提供了参考。
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Collaborative outcomes study on health and functioning during infection times (COH-FIT): Insights on modifiable and non-modifiable risk and protective factors for wellbeing and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic from multivariable and network analyses
There is no multi-country/multi-language study testing a-priori multivariable associations between non-modifiable/modifiable factors and validated wellbeing/multidimensional mental health outcomes before/during the COVID-19 pandemic. Moreover, studies during COVID-19 pandemic generally do not report on representative/weighted non-probability samples. The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times (COH-FIT) is a multi-country/multi-language survey conducting multivariable/LASSO-regularized regression models and network analyses to identify modifiable/non-modifiable factors associated with wellbeing (WHO-5)/composite psychopathology (P-score) change. It enrolled general population-representative/weighted-non-probability samples (26/04/2020-19/06/2022). Participants included 121,066 adults (age=42±15.9 years, females=64 %, representative sample=29 %) WHO-5/P-score worsened (SMD=0.53/SMD=0.74), especially initially during the pandemic. We identified 15 modifiable/nine non-modifiable risk and 13 modifiable/three non-modifiable protective factors for WHO-5, 16 modifiable/11 non-modifiable risk and 10 modifiable/six non-modifiable protective factors for P-score. The 12 shared risk/protective factors with highest centrality (network-analysis) were, for non-modifiable factors, country income, ethnicity, age, gender, education, mental disorder history, COVID-19-related restrictions, urbanicity, physical disorder history, household room numbers and green space, and socioeconomic status. For modifiable factors, we identified medications, learning, internet, pet-ownership, working and religion as coping strategies, plus pre-pandemic levels of stress, fear, TV, social media or reading time, and COVID-19 information. In multivariable models, for WHO-5, additional non-modifiable factors with |B|>1 were income loss, COVID-19 deaths. For modifiable factors we identified pre-pandemic levels of social functioning, hobbies, frustration and loneliness, and social interactions as coping strategy. For P-scores, additional non-modifiable/modifiable factors were income loss, pre-pandemic infection fear, and social interactions as coping strategy. COH-FIT identified vulnerable sub-populations and actionable individual/environmental factors to protect well-being/mental health during crisis times. Results inform public health policies, and clinical practice.
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来源期刊
European Neuropsychopharmacology
European Neuropsychopharmacology 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
5.40%
发文量
730
审稿时长
41 days
期刊介绍: European Neuropsychopharmacology is the official publication of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP). In accordance with the mission of the College, the journal focuses on clinical and basic science contributions that advance our understanding of brain function and human behaviour and enable translation into improved treatments and enhanced public health impact in psychiatry. Recent years have been characterized by exciting advances in basic knowledge and available experimental techniques in neuroscience and genomics. However, clinical translation of these findings has not been as rapid. The journal aims to narrow this gap by promoting findings that are expected to have a major impact on both our understanding of the biological bases of mental disorders and the development and improvement of treatments, ideally paving the way for prevention and recovery.
期刊最新文献
Towards a consensus roadmap for a new diagnostic framework for mental disorders The post COVID era in mental health systems: Better together Collaborative outcomes study on health and functioning during infection times (COH-FIT): Insights on modifiable and non-modifiable risk and protective factors for wellbeing and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic from multivariable and network analyses Orbitofrontal cortex hypergyrification in hallucinating schizophrenia patients: Surface ratio as a promising brain biomarker Structural connectivity of dopaminergic pathways in major depressive disorder: An ultra-high resolution 7-Tesla diffusion MRI study
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