对 COVID-19 集中检疫期间影响心理健康的因素进行纵向调查。

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Health Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1093/inthealth/ihad062
Haoran Yu, Wenyan Huang, Xin Yang, Hao Yang, Hui Ma, Ning Zhang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:为应对2019年冠状病毒疾病的爆发而实施了集中隔离。本研究旨在调查隔离前后被隔离者心理状态的变化:2020年8月至2021年7月期间,648名参与者在集中隔离前后完成了以下心理测量评估:9项患者健康问卷(抑郁)、7项广泛性焦虑症(焦虑)、中文版康纳-戴维森复原力量表(心理复原力)、中文版简易应对方式问卷(应对方式)、江氏修订版中文版感知社会支持量表(社会支持)和中文版事件影响量表(压力):集中隔离开始时,83.2%(539 人)的参与者没有抑郁情绪,11%(71 人)有轻度抑郁情绪,5.8%(38 人)有中度-重度抑郁情绪。检疫结束时,80.8%(n=524)的参与者没有抑郁情绪,13%(n=84)有轻度抑郁情绪,6.2%(n=41)有中度-重度抑郁情绪。在集中隔离开始时,86.7% 的参与者(人数=562)没有焦虑情绪,9.6% 的参与者(人数=62)有轻度焦虑情绪,3.7% 的参与者(人数=24)有中度焦虑情绪。检疫结束时,85.8% 的参与者(人数=556)没有焦虑,11.6% 的参与者(人数=75)有轻度焦虑,2.6% 的参与者(人数=17)有中度严重焦虑。集中隔离 2 周后,焦虑(t=2.175,pConclusions:集中检疫期间良好的心理健康与心理承受能力、事件影响、应对方式和社会支持的高分有关,而且在有足够支持的情况下,心理健康不会恶化。
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Longitudinal investigation of factors influencing mental health during centralized quarantine for COVID-19.

Background: Centralized quarantine was applied in response to the coronavirus disease 2019 outbreak. The present study aimed to investigate changes in psychological status of isolated individuals before and after quarantine.

Methods: Between August 2020 and July 2021, 648 participants completed the following psychometric evaluations before and after centralized quarantine: 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire for depression, 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder for anxiety, the Chinese version of the Connor Davidson Resilience Scale for psychological resilience, the Chinese version of the Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire for coping style, Jiang's revised Chinese version of the Perceived Social Support Scale for social support and the Chinese version of the Impact of Events Scale for stress.

Results: At the beginning of centralized quarantine, 83.2% (n=539) of participants had no depressive mood, 11% (n=71) had mild depressive mood and 5.8% (n=38) had moderate-severe depressive mood. At the end of quarantine, 80.8% (n=524) of participants had no depressive mood, 13% (n=84) had mild depressive mood and 6.2% (n=41) had moderate-severe depressive mood. At the beginning of the centralized quarantine, 86.7% (n=562) of participants had no anxiety, 9.6% (n=62) had mild anxiety and 3.7% (n=24) had moderate-severe anxiety. At the end of quarantine, 85.8% (n=556) of participants had no anxiety, 11.6% (n=75) had mild anxiety and 2.6% (n=17) had moderate-severe anxiety. After 2 weeks of centralized quarantine, anxiety (t=2.175, p<0.05), stress (t=7.453, p<0.01) and three stress subscale scores (p<0.01) decreased significantly; psychology resilience (t=-3.63, p<0.01), tenacity (t=-4.747, p<0.01), active coping style (t=-3.83, p<0.01) and support outside family (t=-3.07, p<0.05) all increased significantly. No significant change was observed in depression, strength, optimism, passive coping style or support inside family. Depression and anxiety scores associated significantly with resilience, stress, coping styles and social support scores. Anxiety (B=0.488, β=0.413, p<0.01), psychological resilience (B=-0.047, β=-0.203, p<0.01) and stress (B=1.475, β=0.167, p<0.1) scores before centralized quarantine were associated with depression after quarantine. Depression (B=0.323, β=0.422, p<0.01), psychological resilience (B=-0.022, β=-0.123, p<0.01) and stress (B=1.408, β=0.207, p<0.01) scores before quarantine also influenced anxiety levels after quarantine. A cross-lagged panel model indicated that depression, anxiety, resilience and stress scores at the first assessment were predictive of depression and anxiety levels at the second assessment.

Conclusions: Good mental health during centralized quarantine was associated with high scores of psychological resilience, impact of events, coping styles and social support and did not become worse in settings where adequate support was available.

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来源期刊
International Health
International Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
83
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: International Health is an official journal of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene. It publishes original, peer-reviewed articles and reviews on all aspects of global health including the social and economic aspects of communicable and non-communicable diseases, health systems research, policy and implementation, and the evaluation of disease control programmes and healthcare delivery solutions. It aims to stimulate scientific and policy debate and provide a forum for analysis and opinion sharing for individuals and organisations engaged in all areas of global health.
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