| Literature DB >> 32472486 |
Crystal L Park1, Beth S Russell2, Michael Fendrich3, Lucy Finkelstein-Fox4, Morica Hutchison2, Jessica Becker3.
Abstract
IMPORTANCE: Documenting Americans' stress responses to an unprecedented pandemic and their degree of adherence to CDC guidelines is essential for mental health interventions and policy-making.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32472486 PMCID: PMC7259430 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-020-05898-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Demographic Characteristics of the Sample
| Demographic | |
|---|---|
| Age (years), | 38.9 (13.5) |
| Gender, | |
| Male | 453 (44.6%) |
| Female | 547 (53.9%) |
| Non-binary/third gender | 3 (0.3%) |
| Transgender | 4 (0.4%) |
| Prefer to self-describe | 4 (0.4%) |
| Prefer not to say | 4 (0.4%) |
| Race, | |
| Black/African American | 122 (12.0%) |
| Asian/Asian American | 121 (11.9%) |
| Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander | 50 (4.9%) |
| American Indian/Alaska Native | 70 (6.9%) |
| White | 836 (82.4%) |
| Ethnicity, | |
| Hispanic | 86 (8.5%) |
| Non-Hispanic | 929 (91.5%) |
| Sexual orientation, | |
| Straight/heterosexual | 895 (88.2%) |
| Gay or lesbian | 40 (3.9%) |
| Bisexual | 64 (6.3%) |
| Prefer to self-describe | 7 (0.7%) |
| Prefer not to say | 9 (0.9%) |
| Geographic state, | |
| West | 244 (24.1%) |
| Midwest | 199 (19.6%) |
| South | 383 (37.7%) |
| Northeast | 188 (18.5%) |
| Marital status, | |
| Married | 407 (40.1%) |
| Single | 359 (35.4%) |
| Divorced | 73 (7.2%) |
| Separated | 14 (1.4%) |
| Widowed | 18 (1.8%) |
| Living with but not married | 144 (14.2%) |
| Current living arrangement, | |
| In parent/guardian home | 158 (15.6%) |
| With others (no relation) | 214 (21.1%) |
| With others (related) | 468 (46.1%) |
| By yourself | 172 (16.9%) |
| Residence location, | |
| House | 614 (60.5%) |
| Apartment | 243 (23.9%) |
| Caregiver status, | |
| Yes | 219 (21.6%) |
| No | 796 (78.4%) |
| Type of caregiver, | |
| Child (under 18 years old) | 182 (83.1%) |
| Same age relative/friend | 12 (5.5%) |
| Parent | 19 (8.7%) |
| Grandparent | 4 (1.8%) |
| Other | 2 (0.9%) |
| Current student status, | |
| No | 890 (87.7%) |
| Yes, part-time | 60 (5.9%) |
| Yes, full-time | 65 (6.4%) |
| Type of school, | |
| Residential | 44 (35.2%) |
| Commuter | 51 (40.8%) |
| Online-only | 30 (24.0%) |
| Prior to COVID-19 employment status, | |
| No | 180 (17.7%) |
| Yes, part-time | 185 (18.2%) |
| Yes, full-time | 650 (64.0%) |
| Current employment status, | |
| No | 286 (28.2%) |
| Yes, part-time | 198 (19.5%) |
| Yes, full-time | 531 (52.3%) |
| Finances sufficient to meet needs, | |
| Not at all | 74 (7.3%) |
| A little | 209 (20.6%) |
| Moderately | 219 (21.6%) |
| Mostly | 276 (27.2%) |
| Completely | 237 (23.3%) |
Prevalence and Stressfulness of COVID-19-Related Stressors
| Group differences in stressor prevalence | Mean stress appraisal ( | Group differences in stress appraisal | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infection-related | ||||
| 1. Risk of becoming infected | 576 (56.8%) | e1 ( | 3.06 (1.03) | a1 ( |
| 2. Self-monitoring of symptoms | 440 (43.4%) | c1 ( | 2.43 (1.13) | b ( |
| 3. Risk of loved ones becoming infected | 622 (61.3%) | a1 ( | 3.65 (1.01) | a1 ( |
| 4. Risk of unintentionally infecting other people | 246 (24.3%) | d1 ( | 3.26 (1.08) | e1 ( |
| 5. Read or heard others talk about the severity and contagiousness of COVID-19 | 980 (96.6%) | d2 ( | 3.07 (1.08) | a1 ( |
| 6. Stigma, shame, discrimination, or social exile related to quarantine or working in a high-risk area (e.g., others shunning you because you work in healthcare)? | 66 (6.5%) | b ( | 3.53 (0.96) | b ( |
| 7. Stigma, shame, or discrimination related to being in a certain age group (e.g., negative statements about Millennials or Generation Z) | 158 (15.6%) | c1 ( | 2.57 (1.13) | b ( |
| 8. Uncertainty about how long quarantine and/or social distancing requirements will last? | 896 (88.3%) | a1 ( | 3.26 (1.08) | a1 ( |
| Activity-related | ||||
| 9. Changes to daily personal care routines (e.g., cooking, cleaning, exercise/relaxation, hobbies) | 811 (80.1%) | d1 ( | 2.76 (1.12) | a1 ( |
| 10. Changes to daily work routines (e.g., unable to earn money, attend full- or part-time work schedule) | 608 (60.3%) | d1 ( | 3.46 (1.16) | a1 ( |
| 11. Changes to daily education routines (e.g., online instruction) | 233 (23.0%) | a1 ( | 3.16 (1.13) | d1 ( |
| 12. Changes to social routines (e.g., spending free time with friends/loved ones) | 849 (83.7%) | - | 2.91 (1.12) | a1 ( |
| 13. Changed responsibilities to care for dependents (e.g., childcare, eldercare) | 246 (24.3%) | b ( | 2.10 (1.17) | d1 ( |
| 14. Cancelation of planned or scheduled celebrations, entertainment, vacations, or trips (e.g., graduations, birthdays, concerts) | 696 (68.7%) | a1 ( | 2.95 (1.15) | d1 ( |
| 15. Cancelation of meaningful personal or religious rituals (e.g., funerals, religious services) | 266 (26.3%) | b ( | 2.94 (1.19) | a1 ( |
| 16. Inability to travel (e.g., cancelation of vacations, weekend trips) | 565 (55.8%) | e2 ( | 2.90 (1.12) | d1 ( |
| 17. Increased contact with close others or loved ones (e.g., increased conflict, co-worrying) | 438 (43.3%) | b ( | 2.60 (1.17) | a1 ( |
| 18. Pressure to “make the most of” COVID-19 or “find a silver lining” while quarantining (e.g., social media fitness challenges, encouragement to increase productivity) | 502 (49.7%) | a1 ( | 2.41 (1.20) | a1 ( |
| Financial/resource-related | ||||
| 19. Loss of current job security or income (e.g., inability to earn money)? | 339 (33.6%) | a1 ( | 4.09 (0.96) | d1 ( |
| 20. Loss of current job training opportunities or education benchmarks (e.g., certification, apprenticeship, internship or degree completion) | 121 (12.0%) | d1 ( | 3.52 (1.18) | a1 ( |
| 21. Potential changes to the national or global economy (e.g., future job prospects, loss of investments) | 643 (63.6%) | - | 3.45 (1.05) | a1 ( |
| 22. Difficulty accessing important resources for daily life (e.g., healthcare, food, clothes, water, housing, medical supplies or prescriptions) | 501 (49.5%) | a1 ( | 3.36 (1.04) | a1 ( |
| 23. Inadequate access to reliable information about COVID-19 (including your personal risk of illness) | 176 (17.4%) | d1 ( | 3.50 (1.09) | e1 ( |
a1, reported more by women vs. men; a2, reported more by men vs. women; b, reported more by caregivers vs. non-caregivers; c1, reported more by non-heterosexual participants; c2, reported more by heterosexual participants; d1, negatively associated with older age; d2, positively associated with older age; e1, negatively associated with having needs met; e2, positively associated with having needs met; f, reported more often by non-White participants (all two-tailed p’s < .05). Two-tailed independent samples t tests were used for categorical group comparisons; bivariate correlations were used for continuous predictors (age and financial needs met) to retain maximal variance. Average stress appraisals apply only for participants who endorsed experiencing each item; participants who did not endorse a given item did not report on stress appraisals. Standardized effect sizes differ by statistical test used (h = Cohen’s h (0.20 = small, 0.50 = medium, 0.80 = large); d = Cohen’s d (0.20 = small, 0.50 = medium, 0.80 = large); r = bivariate correlation (0.1 = small, 0.3 = medium, 0.5 = large))
Coping with COVID-Related Stress
| Mean ( | Range | Cronbach’s alpha | Demographic predictors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| COPE subscales | ||||
| 1. Substance use (4 items) | 1.45 (0.78) | 1–4 | 0.96 | c1 ( |
| 2. Active (2 items) | 2.43 (0.83) | 1–4 | 0.77 | b ( |
| 3. Distraction (2 items) | 2.70 (0.80) | 1–4 | 0.48 | a1 ( |
| 4. Behavioral disengagement (2 items) | 1.40 (0.66) | 1–4 | 0.74 | c1 ( |
| 5. Humor (2 items) | 1.86 (0.89) | 1–4 | 0.88 | a2 ( |
| 6. Seeking instrumental social support (2 items) | 1.91 (0.83) | 1–4 | 0.83 | b ( |
| 7. Seeking emotional social support (2 items) | 2.23 (0.89) | 1–4 | 0.84 | a1 ( |
| 8. Religious support (2 items) | 1.78 (1.00) | 1–4 | 0.90 | a1 ( |
a1, reported more by women vs. men; a2, reported more by men vs. women; b, reported more by caregivers vs. non-caregivers; c1, reported more by non-heterosexual participants; c2, reported more by heterosexual participants; d1, negatively associated with older age; d2, positively associated with older age; e1, negatively associated with having needs met; e2, positively associated with having needs met; f, reported more often by non-White participants (all two-tailed p’s < .05). Two-tailed independent samples t tests were used for categorical group comparisons; bivariate correlations were used for continuous predictors (age and financial needs met). Mean response values were calculated for each subscale to facilitate comparison and interpretability. Standardized effect sizes differ by statistical test used (d = Cohen’s d (0.20 = small, 0.50 = medium, 0.80 = large); r = bivariate correlation (0.1 = small, 0.3 = medium, 0.5 = large))
Adherence with CDC Recommendations
| 1. Avoid in person social gatherings | 91.99 (18.50) | 100 | a1 ( |
| 2. Avoid eating or gathering at bars, restaurants and food courts—use drive thru, pickup, or delivery options instead | 95.10 (15.57) | 100 | a1 ( |
| 3. Avoid discretionary travel, shopping trips, and social visits | 89.74 (19.55) | 100 | a1 ( |
| 4. Avoid visits to nursing homes, retirement homes, and long-term care facilities | 94.38 (19.17) | 100 | a1 ( |
| 5. Put 6 ft of physical distance between yourself and other people | 87.42 (19.84) | 97 | a1 ( |
| 6. Avoid physical touching when greeting other people (i.e., handshakes, hugs) | 93.06 (17.33) | 100 | d2 ( |
| 7. Avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth with unwashed hands | 77.87 (25.30) | 85 | d2 ( |
| 8. Avoid close contact with people who are sick | 94.86 (15.53) | 100 | d2 ( |
| 9. Cover your mouth and nose with a tissue when you cough or sneeze (or use the inside of your elbow); throw used tissues in the trash | 91.07 (19.34) | 100 | a1 ( |
| 10. Clean and disinfect frequently touched surfaces daily | 74.68 (29.88) | 87 | a1 ( |
| 11. Wash your hands often, with soap and water for at least 20 s, or if soap and water are not readily available, use a hand sanitizer that contains at least 60% alcohol. Cover all surfaces of your hands and rub them together until they feel dry | 88.27 (20.25) | 99 | a1 ( |
| 12. Have a plan for taking time off from work or school, in case you are told to stay home for 14 days of self-monitoring or if you get sick with COVID-19 | 72.74 (35.85) | 97 | e2 ( |
| Have you felt unwell/sick or had a fever in the last 7 days or tested positive for COVID-19? | 62 (6.1) | - | |
| 1. Wear a facemask | 50.00 (40.49) | 51 | - |
| 2. Stay home, except to get medical care | 84.87 (26.05) | 97 | - |
a1, reported more by women vs. men; a2, reported more by men vs. women; b, reported more by caregivers vs. non-caregivers; c1, reported more by non-heterosexual participants; c2, reported more by heterosexual participants; d1, negatively associated with older age; d2, positively associated with older age; e1, negatively associated with having needs met; e2, positively associated with having needs met; f, reported more often by non-White participants (all two-tailed p’s < .05). Two-tailed independent samples t tests were used for categorical group comparisons; bivariate correlations were used for continuous predictors (age and financial needs met). Standardized effect sizes differ by statistical test used (d = Cohen’s d (0.20 = small, 0.50 = medium, 0.80 = large); r = bivariate correlation (0.1 = small, 0.3 = medium, 0.5 = large))