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The implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for clinical mental health care

The implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for clinical mental health care
The implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for clinical mental health care
A Position Paper published in The Lancet Psychiatry in 2020 suggested an agenda for research about the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health, following which an interdisciplinary Lancet Psychiatry standing commission was established in 2022 to examine the emerging evidence and refine recommendations for more research. In this first Series paper from the standing commission, we focus on changes in the delivery of clinical mental health care during the COVID-19 pandemic. The second paper in the Series focuses on public mental health and policy perspectives, and the third will address neuropsychiatric consequences of infection by SARS-CoV-2. Evidence from high-quality longitudinal studies with pre-pandemic baseline data, controlled intervention trials, or systematic reviews took time to accrue. During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, symptoms of anxiety and depression became more prevalent, and many mental health services were compromised by pandemic-related factors; however, whether the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated pre-existing long-term trends of increasing incidence of mental health disorders, especially in children and adolescents, is unclear. Little research has been done in low-income and middle-income countries, or regarding post-COVID-19 condition (also known as long COVID), which emerged as a multisystem condition with mental health implications. Vulnerable populations, including socioeconomically disadvantaged and minoritised groups, faced disproportionate mental health impacts and limited access to care during the COVID-19 pandemic, reflecting systemic, pre-pandemic inequalities. Bold implementation of existing evidence-based mental health support for vulnerable communities, ambitious trials of novel interventions, and systematic pooling of rapidly accumulating evidence about best healh care should be priorities in future pandemics.
0140-6736
140-161
Schuster, Alexandra M.
24f30242-4a20-4b2c-9183-97228d3c92bc
Alwan, Nisreen A.
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
Callard, Felicity
28fd8f16-74bc-4e6f-9527-0001495ce09c
et al.
Schuster, Alexandra M.
24f30242-4a20-4b2c-9183-97228d3c92bc
Alwan, Nisreen A.
0d37b320-f325-4ed3-ba51-0fe2866d5382
Callard, Felicity
28fd8f16-74bc-4e6f-9527-0001495ce09c

Schuster, Alexandra M., Alwan, Nisreen A. and Callard, Felicity , et al. (2026) The implications of the COVID-19 pandemic for clinical mental health care. The Lancet, 13 (2), 140-161. (doi:10.1016/S2215-0366(25)00247-0).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A Position Paper published in The Lancet Psychiatry in 2020 suggested an agenda for research about the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health, following which an interdisciplinary Lancet Psychiatry standing commission was established in 2022 to examine the emerging evidence and refine recommendations for more research. In this first Series paper from the standing commission, we focus on changes in the delivery of clinical mental health care during the COVID-19 pandemic. The second paper in the Series focuses on public mental health and policy perspectives, and the third will address neuropsychiatric consequences of infection by SARS-CoV-2. Evidence from high-quality longitudinal studies with pre-pandemic baseline data, controlled intervention trials, or systematic reviews took time to accrue. During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, symptoms of anxiety and depression became more prevalent, and many mental health services were compromised by pandemic-related factors; however, whether the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated pre-existing long-term trends of increasing incidence of mental health disorders, especially in children and adolescents, is unclear. Little research has been done in low-income and middle-income countries, or regarding post-COVID-19 condition (also known as long COVID), which emerged as a multisystem condition with mental health implications. Vulnerable populations, including socioeconomically disadvantaged and minoritised groups, faced disproportionate mental health impacts and limited access to care during the COVID-19 pandemic, reflecting systemic, pre-pandemic inequalities. Bold implementation of existing evidence-based mental health support for vulnerable communities, ambitious trials of novel interventions, and systematic pooling of rapidly accumulating evidence about best healh care should be priorities in future pandemics.

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Paper_I_-_Manuscript_Lancet_Psych_accepted - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 7 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505438
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505438
ISSN: 0140-6736
PURE UUID: bbf51173-402f-44ed-a078-a879811a438b
ORCID for Nisreen A. Alwan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4134-8463

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Date deposited: 08 Oct 2025 16:48
Last modified: 23 Jan 2026 02:46

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Contributors

Author: Alexandra M. Schuster
Author: Felicity Callard
Corporate Author: et al.

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