Back to Search Start Over

Increase in mental disorders during the COVID-19 pandemic - The role of occupational and financial strains

Authors :
Nico, Dragano
Marvin, Reuter
Annette, Peters
Miriam, Engels
Börge, Schmidt
Karin H, Greiser
Barbara, Bohn
Steffi, Riedel-Heller
André, Karch
Rafael, Mikolajczyk
Gérard, Krause
Olga, Lang
Leo, Panreck
Marcella, Rietschel
Hermann, Brenner
Beate, Fischer
Claus-Werner, Franzke
Sylvia, Gastell
Bernd, Holleczek
Karl-Heinz, Jöckel
Rudolf, Kaaks
Thomas, Keil
Alexander, Kluttig
Oliver, Kuss
Nicole, Legath
Michael, Leitzmann
Wolfgang, Lieb
Claudia, Meinke-Franze
Karin B, Michels
Nadia, Obi
Tobias, Pischon
Insa, Feinkohl
Susanne, Rospleszcz
Tamara, Schikowski
Matthias B, Schulze
Andreas, Stang
Henry, Völzke
Stefan N, Willich
Kerstin, Wirkner
Hajo, Zeeb
Wolfgang, Ahrens
Klaus, Berger
Source :
Deutsches Ärzteblatt, 119(11):179-187, Dtsch Arztebl Int
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Numerous studies have reported an increase in mental disorders during the COVID-19 pandemic, but the exact reasons for this development are not well understood. In this study we investigate whether pandemic-related occupational and financial changes (e.g., reduced working hours, working from home, financial losses) were associated with increased symptoms of depression and anxiety compared with the situation before the pandemic. METHODS: We analyzed data from the German National Cohort (NAKO) Study. Between May and November 2020, 161 849 study participants answered questions on their mental state and social circumstances. Their responses were compared with data from the baseline survey before the pandemic (2014–2019). Linear fixed-effects models were used to determine whether individual changes in the severity of symptoms of depression (PHQ-9) or anxiety (GAD-7) were associated with occupational/ financial changes (controlling for various covariates). RESULTS: The prevalence of moderate or severe symptoms of depression and anxiety increased by 2.4% and 1.5%, respectively, during the COVID-19 pandemic compared with the preceding years. The mean severity of the symptoms rose slightly. A pronounced increase in symptoms was observed among those who became unemployed during the pandemic (+ 1.16 points on the depression scale, 95% confidence interval [0.91; 1.41], range 0–27). Increases were also seen for reduced working hours with no short-time allowance, increased working hours, working from home, insecurity regarding employment, and financial strain. The deterioration in mental health was largely statistically explained by the occupational and financial changes investigated in the model. CONCLUSION: Depressive symptoms and anxiety disorders increased slightly in the study population during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Occupational and financial difficulties were an essential contributory factor. These strains should be taken into account both in the care of individual patients and in the planning of targeted prevention measures.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Deutsches Ärzteblatt, 119(11):179-187, Dtsch Arztebl Int
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....a91610d0b7edf9346ba79dc557d169e2