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Global and risk-group stratified well-being and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in adults: results from the international COH-FIT Study

Global and risk-group stratified well-being and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in adults: results from the international COH-FIT Study
Global and risk-group stratified well-being and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in adults: results from the international COH-FIT Study
International studies measuring wellbeing/multidimensional mental health before/ during the COVID-19 pandemic, including representative samples for >2 years, identifying risk groups and coping strategies are lacking. COH-FIT is an online, international, anonymous survey measuring changes in well-being (WHO-5) and a composite psychopathology P-score, and their associations with COVID-19 deaths/restrictions, 12 a-priori defined risk individual/cumulative factors, and coping strategies during COVID-19 pandemic (26/04/2020-26/06/2022) in 30 languages (representative, weighted non-representative, adults). T-test, χ2, penalized cubic splines, linear regression, correlation analyses were conducted. Analyzing 121,066/142,364 initiated surveys, WHO-5/P-score worsened intra-pandemic by 11.1±21.1/13.2±17.9 points (effect size d=0.50/0.60) (comparable results in representative/weighted non-probability samples). Persons with WHO-5 scores indicative of depression screening (<50, 13% to 32%) and major depression (<29, 3% to 12%) significantly increased. WHO-5 worsened from those with mental disorders, female sex, COVID-19-related loss, low-income country location, physical disorders, healthcare worker occupations, large city location, COVID-19 infection, unemployment, firstgeneration immigration, to age=18-29 with a cumulative effect. Similar findings emerged for P-score. Changes were significantly but minimally related to COVID-19 deaths, returning to near-pre-pandemic values after >2 years. The most subjectively effective coping strategies were exercise and walking, internet use, social contacts. Identified risk groups, coping strategies and outcome trajectories can inform global public health strategies.
Covid-19 Pandemic Survey WHO-5 P-factor Well-being Mental health Psychiatry Psychopathology
0165-1781
Solmi, Marco
2022a2e4-774d-4811-b1db-b6dbfedbd10d
Thompson, Trevor
9abe924d-2cb1-4e2e-9f51-f546576924d8
Estradé, Andrés
8fcfaf73-ff46-4de3-94ee-384c9032cf1e
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
et al.
Solmi, Marco
2022a2e4-774d-4811-b1db-b6dbfedbd10d
Thompson, Trevor
9abe924d-2cb1-4e2e-9f51-f546576924d8
Estradé, Andrés
8fcfaf73-ff46-4de3-94ee-384c9032cf1e
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb

Solmi, Marco, Thompson, Trevor and Estradé, Andrés , et al. (2024) Global and risk-group stratified well-being and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in adults: results from the international COH-FIT Study. Psychiatry Research, [115972]. (doi:10.1016/j.psychres.2024.115972).

Record type: Article

Abstract

International studies measuring wellbeing/multidimensional mental health before/ during the COVID-19 pandemic, including representative samples for >2 years, identifying risk groups and coping strategies are lacking. COH-FIT is an online, international, anonymous survey measuring changes in well-being (WHO-5) and a composite psychopathology P-score, and their associations with COVID-19 deaths/restrictions, 12 a-priori defined risk individual/cumulative factors, and coping strategies during COVID-19 pandemic (26/04/2020-26/06/2022) in 30 languages (representative, weighted non-representative, adults). T-test, χ2, penalized cubic splines, linear regression, correlation analyses were conducted. Analyzing 121,066/142,364 initiated surveys, WHO-5/P-score worsened intra-pandemic by 11.1±21.1/13.2±17.9 points (effect size d=0.50/0.60) (comparable results in representative/weighted non-probability samples). Persons with WHO-5 scores indicative of depression screening (<50, 13% to 32%) and major depression (<29, 3% to 12%) significantly increased. WHO-5 worsened from those with mental disorders, female sex, COVID-19-related loss, low-income country location, physical disorders, healthcare worker occupations, large city location, COVID-19 infection, unemployment, firstgeneration immigration, to age=18-29 with a cumulative effect. Similar findings emerged for P-score. Changes were significantly but minimally related to COVID-19 deaths, returning to near-pre-pandemic values after >2 years. The most subjectively effective coping strategies were exercise and walking, internet use, social contacts. Identified risk groups, coping strategies and outcome trajectories can inform global public health strategies.

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Accepted/In Press date: 18 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 23 May 2024
Published date: 20 September 2024
Keywords: Covid-19 Pandemic Survey WHO-5 P-factor Well-being Mental health Psychiatry Psychopathology

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495744
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495744
ISSN: 0165-1781
PURE UUID: d92abbf9-890b-4bec-b588-345654640448
ORCID for Samuele Cortese: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5877-8075

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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2024 17:41
Last modified: 22 Nov 2024 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Marco Solmi
Author: Trevor Thompson
Author: Andrés Estradé
Author: Samuele Cortese ORCID iD
Corporate Author: et al.

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