| Literature DB >> 32456713 |
Karen O'Connor1,2, Margo Wrigley3,4, Rhona Jennings5, Michele Hill6, Amir Niazi7.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic is a global health emergency, the scale, speed and nature of which is beyond anything most of us have experienced in our lifetimes. The mental health burden associated with this pandemic is also likely to surpass anything we have previously experienced. In this editorial, we seek to anticipate the nature of this additional mental health burden and make recommendations on how to mitigate against and prepare for this significant increase in mental health service demand.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; mental health; policy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32456713 PMCID: PMC7471570 DOI: 10.1017/ipm.2020.64
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ir J Psychol Med ISSN: 0790-9667
Fig. 1.The four waves of health need associated with the COVID-19 pandemic
Features of this pandemic that will impact on mental health burden in the medium to longer term
| Feature of the COVID-19 Pandemic | Impact on Mental Health Burden |
|---|---|
| Scale of the COVID-19 pandemic |
PTSD Complex grief Depression Anxiety disorders Neuropsychiatric consequences of covid infection |
| Relentless media coverage | Difficult to cope with anxiety, fear and anticipation of the pandemic. Difficulty sleeping, eating, taking a break from coverage and impact. |
| Social distancing measures | Greater impact on vulnerable groups, for example, those in poverty, insecure housing/work, single-parent families, abusive relationships, direct provision and people with mental illness who will have less social and professional support. |
| Secondary economic crisis | Well-established association with higher rates of mental illness, suicide and substance use disorders |
| Reduced non-COVID-19 health service utilization | Reluctance to attend for acute care due to fears of COVID-19 infection resulting in delays in effective treatment and increase in crisis presentations |
| Reduced availability/altered access to mental health services | Reconfiguration of services and redeployment of staff results in reduced access to care |
| Retraction of the National Clinical Programmes | |
|
Self-harm |
Inability to meet the anticipated increase in self-harm presentations Associated with increased morbidity, mortality and increased burden on Community Mental Health Teams |
|
Early intervention for psychosis | Failure to implement national roll out in line with Model of Care resulting in: Increase in duration of untreated psychosis and an associated worsening of prognosis. Failure to deliver evidence-based interventions resulting in increased relapse, increased crisis presentations, increased hospital admissions, worse health outcomes. |
|
Eating disorders | Failure to implement national roll out in line with Model of Care resulting in: Delays in accessing service Increased reliance on costly hospital admissions and expensive out of country placements. Failure to deliver evidence-based interventions resulting in poorer prognosis, increased crisis care and increased reliance on hospital admissions |
|
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in adults | Failure to implement national roll out in line with Model of Care resulting in: Little to no access to assessment and treatment in adults Misdiagnosis Increased co-morbidity: depression, anxiety, self-harm |
| Suspension of all development plans | No implementation of the following: Mental Health Information System Youth Mental Health Taskforce Recommendations of National Clinical Lead and Leads in each CHO 24/7 Crisis Teams Increase in staffing numbers to be in line with A Vision for Change Recommendations in 2019 Borderline personality disorder Autism spectrum disorders Substance use disorders |
Note: The contents of this Table were developed by the authors as part of an expert working group in consultation with relevant stakeholders.
A summary of the potential impact of COVID-19 on specific mental disorders requiring input from secondary mental health services
| Mental Illness | Impact of COVID-19 | Mental Health Consequences |
|---|---|---|
| Anxiety disorders | Increased anticipatory anxiety, avoidance and anxiety symptoms. | Increased risk of relapse of anxiety disorder symptoms including panic attacks, agoraphobia, health-related anxiety symptoms |
| Affective disorders | Increased social isolation and loneliness | Relapse of depression |
| Psychosis | Rates of isolation and loneliness are higher in this population at baseline. | Relapse of psychotic symptoms, for example, hallucinations, delusions. |
| Eating Disorders | Disruption of usual routines. | Relapse or exacerbation of eating disorder |
| Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder | Disruption to routine, reduced capacity to be active, difficulty accessing a work/school environment at home. | Reduced capacity to relax, increased restlessness and impulsivity. |
| Personality disorder | Increased social isolation and loneliness | Emotional dysregulation |
| Dual diagnosis | Reduced social support which is central to most addiction programmes. | Risk of relapse to alcohol or substance abuse. |
Note: The contents of this Table were developed by the authors as part of an expert working group in consultation with relevant stakeholders