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Attitudes About COVID-19 and Health (ATTACH): Online survey and mixed methods Study

Attitudes About COVID-19 and Health (ATTACH): Online survey and mixed methods Study
Attitudes About COVID-19 and Health (ATTACH): Online survey and mixed methods Study
Background:
Behavioral mitigation strategies to slow the spread of COVID-19 have resulted in sweeping lifestyle changes, with short- and long-term psychological, well-being, and quality of life implications. The Attitudes About COVID-19 and Health (ATTACH) study focuses on understanding attitudes and beliefs while considering the impact on mental and physical health and the influence of broader demographic and geographic factors on attitudes, beliefs, and mental health burden.

Objective:
In this assessment of our first wave of data collection, we provide baseline cohort description of the ATTACH study participants in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Mexico. Additionally, we assess responses to daily poll questions related to COVID-19 and conduct a cross-sectional analysis of baseline assessments collected in the UK between June 26 and October 31, 2020.

Methods:
The ATTACH study uses smartphone app technology and online survey data collection. Participants completed poll questions related to COVID-19 2 times daily and a monthly survey assessing mental health, social isolation, physical health, and quality of life. Poll question responses were graphed using 95% Clopper–Pearson (exact) tests with 95% CIs. Pearson correlations, hierarchical linear regression analyses, and generalized linear models assessed relationships, predictors of self-reported outcomes, and group differences, respectively.

Results:
By October 31, 2020, 1405, 80, and 90 participants had consented to participate in the UK, United States, and Mexico, respectively. Descriptive data for the UK daily poll questions indicated that participants generally followed social distancing measures, but worry and negative impacts on families increased as the pandemic progressed. Although participants generally reported feeling that the reasons for current measures had been made clear, there was low trust that the government was doing everything in its power to meet public needs. In the UK, 1282 participants also completed a monthly survey (94.99% [1326/1396] White, 72.22% [1014/1404] female, and 20.12% [277/1377] key or essential workers); 18.88% (242/1282) of UK participants reported a preexisting mental health disorder, 31.36% (402/1282) reported a preexisting chronic medical illness, and 35.11% (493/1404) were aged over 65; 57.72% (740/1282) of participants reported being more sedentary since the pandemic began, and 41.89% (537/1282) reported reduced access to medical care. Those with poorer mental health outcomes lived in more deprived neighborhoods, in larger households (Ps<.05), had more preexisting mental health disorders and medical conditions, and were younger than 65 years (all Ps<.001).

Conclusions:
Communities who have been exposed to additional harm during the COVID-19 pandemic were experiencing worse mental outcomes. Factors including having a medical condition, or living in a deprived neighborhood or larger household were associated with heightened risk. Future longitudinal studies should investigate the link between COVID-19 exposure, mental health, and sociodemographic and residential characteristics.
COVID-19, mental health, international, mitigation strategies, deprivation
2368-7959
Hood, Anna M.
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Stotesbury, Hanne
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Murphy, Jennifer
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Kolbel, Melanie
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Slee, April
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Springall, Charlie
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Paradis, Matthew
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Corral-Frias, Nadia Sarai
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Reyes-Aguilar, Azalea
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Barboza, Alfredo B. Cuellar
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Noser, Amy E.
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Gomes, Stacey
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Mitchell, Monica
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Watkins, Sharon M.
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Kovacic, Melinda Butsch
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Kirkham, Fenella J.
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Crosby, Lori E.
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Hood, Anna M.
aec0f143-3f19-4a0e-b13c-92ecfd3363a5
Stotesbury, Hanne
1104423d-f215-4585-bb50-29b7fdd6c518
Murphy, Jennifer
fbe7717e-9f5b-4446-88b5-427bdad9b175
Kolbel, Melanie
8cc77aaa-7988-4c96-bdad-7e480a48eea4
Slee, April
993ac4ad-4ee4-437a-9f42-e27f8a7046d0
Springall, Charlie
c289be86-dfdb-4a10-9fde-f4e6e2811a7a
Paradis, Matthew
7ffc3d68-3a2f-4eaa-96f7-d4f6a55413f3
Corral-Frias, Nadia Sarai
5835b39f-38de-43b0-9b87-383c7e76b1b9
Reyes-Aguilar, Azalea
78c7f43e-4844-4684-bb19-ec0cf46ca9c5
Barboza, Alfredo B. Cuellar
fe6dc270-a7eb-40a7-aaad-32cd05fff919
Noser, Amy E.
12fc9201-5bcc-49ac-be7c-392c6612ad00
Gomes, Stacey
3690b04a-781c-46c8-a655-6f9ca7ab0a3a
Mitchell, Monica
f06e9b2c-cdc0-43c0-8d7a-673b44c2dc84
Watkins, Sharon M.
b825d92d-ae1c-43d6-9830-501156de055e
Kovacic, Melinda Butsch
58bda992-6898-4a44-9d8b-0dc4bf2adc39
Kirkham, Fenella J.
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Crosby, Lori E.
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Hood, Anna M., Stotesbury, Hanne, Murphy, Jennifer, Kolbel, Melanie, Slee, April, Springall, Charlie, Paradis, Matthew, Corral-Frias, Nadia Sarai, Reyes-Aguilar, Azalea, Barboza, Alfredo B. Cuellar, Noser, Amy E., Gomes, Stacey, Mitchell, Monica, Watkins, Sharon M., Kovacic, Melinda Butsch, Kirkham, Fenella J. and Crosby, Lori E. (2021) Attitudes About COVID-19 and Health (ATTACH): Online survey and mixed methods Study. JMIR MENTAL HEALTH, 8 (10). (doi:10.2196/29963).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background:
Behavioral mitigation strategies to slow the spread of COVID-19 have resulted in sweeping lifestyle changes, with short- and long-term psychological, well-being, and quality of life implications. The Attitudes About COVID-19 and Health (ATTACH) study focuses on understanding attitudes and beliefs while considering the impact on mental and physical health and the influence of broader demographic and geographic factors on attitudes, beliefs, and mental health burden.

Objective:
In this assessment of our first wave of data collection, we provide baseline cohort description of the ATTACH study participants in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Mexico. Additionally, we assess responses to daily poll questions related to COVID-19 and conduct a cross-sectional analysis of baseline assessments collected in the UK between June 26 and October 31, 2020.

Methods:
The ATTACH study uses smartphone app technology and online survey data collection. Participants completed poll questions related to COVID-19 2 times daily and a monthly survey assessing mental health, social isolation, physical health, and quality of life. Poll question responses were graphed using 95% Clopper–Pearson (exact) tests with 95% CIs. Pearson correlations, hierarchical linear regression analyses, and generalized linear models assessed relationships, predictors of self-reported outcomes, and group differences, respectively.

Results:
By October 31, 2020, 1405, 80, and 90 participants had consented to participate in the UK, United States, and Mexico, respectively. Descriptive data for the UK daily poll questions indicated that participants generally followed social distancing measures, but worry and negative impacts on families increased as the pandemic progressed. Although participants generally reported feeling that the reasons for current measures had been made clear, there was low trust that the government was doing everything in its power to meet public needs. In the UK, 1282 participants also completed a monthly survey (94.99% [1326/1396] White, 72.22% [1014/1404] female, and 20.12% [277/1377] key or essential workers); 18.88% (242/1282) of UK participants reported a preexisting mental health disorder, 31.36% (402/1282) reported a preexisting chronic medical illness, and 35.11% (493/1404) were aged over 65; 57.72% (740/1282) of participants reported being more sedentary since the pandemic began, and 41.89% (537/1282) reported reduced access to medical care. Those with poorer mental health outcomes lived in more deprived neighborhoods, in larger households (Ps<.05), had more preexisting mental health disorders and medical conditions, and were younger than 65 years (all Ps<.001).

Conclusions:
Communities who have been exposed to additional harm during the COVID-19 pandemic were experiencing worse mental outcomes. Factors including having a medical condition, or living in a deprived neighborhood or larger household were associated with heightened risk. Future longitudinal studies should investigate the link between COVID-19 exposure, mental health, and sociodemographic and residential characteristics.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 27 April 2021
Published date: 7 October 2021
Keywords: COVID-19, mental health, international, mitigation strategies, deprivation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470236
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470236
ISSN: 2368-7959
PURE UUID: 9262a8c9-961b-43ef-98c8-a3f7684be8a6
ORCID for Fenella J. Kirkham: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2443-7958

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2022 16:32
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:53

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Contributors

Author: Anna M. Hood
Author: Hanne Stotesbury
Author: Jennifer Murphy
Author: Melanie Kolbel
Author: April Slee
Author: Charlie Springall
Author: Matthew Paradis
Author: Nadia Sarai Corral-Frias
Author: Azalea Reyes-Aguilar
Author: Alfredo B. Cuellar Barboza
Author: Amy E. Noser
Author: Stacey Gomes
Author: Monica Mitchell
Author: Sharon M. Watkins
Author: Melinda Butsch Kovacic
Author: Lori E. Crosby

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