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Collaborative Outcomes Study on Health and Functioning During Infection Times (COH-FIT): Global and Risk-Group Stratified Course of Well-Being and Mental Health During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Adolescents.

Authors :
Solmi M
Thompson T
Cortese S
Estradé A
Agorastos A
Radua J
Dragioti E
Vancampfort D
Thygesen LC
Aschauer H
Schlögelhofer M
Aschauer E
Schneeberger AA
Huber CG
Hasler G
Conus P
Do Cuénod KQ
von Känel R
Arrondo G
Fusar-Poli P
Gorwood P
Llorca PM
Krebs MO
Scanferla E
Kishimoto T
Rabbani G
Skonieczna-Żydecka K
Brambilla P
Favaro A
Takamiya A
Zoccante L
Colizzi M
Bourgin J
Kamiński K
Moghadasin M
Seedat S
Matthews E
Wells J
Vassilopoulou E
Gadelha A
Su KP
Kwon JS
Kim M
Lee TY
Papsuev O
Manková D
Boscutti A
Gerunda C
Saccon D
Righi E
Monaco F
Croatto G
Cereda G
Demurtas J
Brondino N
Veronese N
Enrico P
Politi P
Ciappolino V
Pfennig A
Bechdolf A
Meyer-Lindenberg A
Kahl KG
Domschke K
Bauer M
Koutsouleris N
Winter S
Borgwardt S
Bitter I
Balazs J
Czobor P
Unoka Z
Mavridis D
Tsamakis K
Bozikas VP
Tunvirachaisakul C
Maes M
Rungnirundorn T
Supasitthumrong T
Haque A
Brunoni AR
Costardi CG
Schuch FB
Polanczyk G
Luiz JM
Fonseca L
Aparicio LV
Valvassori SS
Nordentoft M
Vendsborg P
Hoffmann SH
Sehli J
Sartorius N
Heuss S
Guinart D
Hamilton J
Kane J
Rubio J
Sand M
Koyanagi A
Solanes A
Andreu-Bernabeu A
San José Cáceres A
Arango C
Díaz-Caneja CM
Hidalgo-Mazzei D
Vieta E
Gonzalez-Peñas J
Fortea L
Parellada M
Fullana MA
Verdolini N
Andrlíková E
Janků K
Millan MJ
Honciuc M
Moniuszko-Malinowska A
Łoniewski I
Samochowiec J
Kiszkiel Ł
Marlicz M
Sowa P
Marlicz W
Spies G
Stubbs B
Firth J
Sullivan S
Darcin AE
Aksu H
Dilbaz N
Noyan O
Kitazawa M
Kurokawa S
Tazawa Y
Anselmi A
Cracco C
Machado AI
Estrade N
De Leo D
Curtis J
Berk M
Carvalho AF
Ward P
Teasdale S
Rosenbaum S
Marx W
Horodnic AV
Oprea L
Alexinschi O
Ifteni P
Turliuc S
Ciuhodaru T
Bolos A
Matei V
Nieman DH
Sommer I
van Os J
van Amelsvoort T
Sun CF
Guu TW
Jiao C
Zhang J
Fan J
Zou L
Yu X
Chi X
de Timary P
van Winkel R
Ng B
Pena E
Arellano R
Roman R
Sanchez T
Movina L
Morgado P
Brissos S
Aizberg O
Mosina A
Krinitski D
Mugisha J
Sadeghi-Bahmani D
Sheybani F
Sadeghi M
Hadi S
Brand S
Errazuriz A
Crossley N
Ristic DI
López-Jaramillo C
Efthymiou D
Kuttichira P
Kallivayalil RA
Javed A
Afridi MI
James B
Seb-Akahomen OJ
Fiedorowicz J
Daskalakis J
Yatham LN
Yang L
Okasha T
Dahdouh A
Tiihonen J
Shin JI
Lee J
Mhalla A
Gaha L
Brahim T
Altynbekov K
Negay N
Nurmagambetova S
Jamei YA
Weiser M
Correll CU
Source :
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry [J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry] 2024 Nov 22. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Nov 22.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Objective: To identify the COVID-19 impact on well-being/mental health, coping strategies and risk factors in adolescent worldwide.<br />Method: Anonymous online multi-national/language survey in the general population (representative/weighted non-representative samples, 14-17years), measuring change in well-being (WHO-5/range=0-100) and psychopathology (validated composite P-score/range=0-100), WHO-5 <50 and <29, pre- versus during COVID-19 pandemic (26/04/2020-26/06/2022). Coping strategies, nine a-priori defined individual/cumulative risk factors were measured. χ <superscript>2</superscript> , penalized cubic splines, linear regression, and correlation analyses were conducted.<br />Results: Analyzing 8,115 of 8,762 initiated surveys (representative=75.1%), the pre-pandemic WHO-5 and P-score remained stable during the study (excluding relevant recall bias/drift), but worsened intra-pandemic by 5.55±17.13 (standard deviation) and 6.74±16.06 points, respectively (effect size d=0.27 and d=0.28). The proportion of adolescents with WHO-5 scores suggesting depression screening (<50) and major depression (<29) increased from 9% to 17% and 2% to 6%. WHO-5 worsened (descending magnitude, with cumulative effect) in adolescents with a mental or physical disorder, female gender, and with school closure. Results were similar for P-score, with the exception of school closure (not significant) and living in a low-income country, as well as not living in a large city (significant). Changes were significantly but minimally related to COVID-19 deaths/restrictions, returning to near-pre-pandemic values after >2 years. The three most subjectively effective coping strategies were internet use, exercise/walking, and social contacts.<br />Conclusion: Overall, well-being/mental health worsened (small effect sizes) during early stages of COVID-19, especially in vulnerable subpopulations. Identified at-risk groups, association with pandemic-related measures, and coping strategies can inform individual behaviours and global public health strategies.<br /> (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1527-5418
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39581373
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaac.2024.07.932