| Literature DB >> 32654678 |
Eleonora Iob1, Andrew Steptoe1, Daisy Fancourt1.
Abstract
This study explored patterns of abuse, self-harm and thoughts of suicide/self-harm in the UK during the first month of the COVID-19 pandemic using data from the COVID-19 Social Study (n=44 775), a non-probability sample weighted to population proportions. The reported frequency of abuse, self-harm and thoughts of suicide/self-harm was higher among women, Black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) groups and people experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage, unemployment, disability, chronic physical illnesses, mental disorders and COVID-19 diagnosis. Psychiatric medications were the most common type of support being used, but fewer than half of those affected were accessing formal or informal support.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; abuse; mental health; self-harm; thoughts of suicide or self-harm
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32654678 PMCID: PMC7360935 DOI: 10.1192/bjp.2020.130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Psychiatry ISSN: 0007-1250 Impact factor: 9.319
Weighted sample characteristics (a) and mental health support strategies (b)
| Total | Psychological abuse | Physical abuse | Self-harm/suicidal thoughts | Self-harm behaviours | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||||
| Female | 22 846 (51.0%) | 4099 (17.9%) | 1205 (5.3%) | ||
| Male | 21 929 (49.0%) | 3885 (17.7%) | 970 (4.4%) | ||
| Age, years | |||||
| 18-29 | 7835 (17.5%) | ||||
| 30-44 | 10 394 (23.2%) | ||||
| 45-59 | 12 031 (26.9%) | ||||
| 60+ | 14 515 (32.4%) | ||||
| Ethnicity | |||||
| BAME groups | 5259 (11.7%) | ||||
| White | 39 516 (88.3%) | ||||
| Marital status | |||||
| Living alone | 9375 (20.9%) | ||||
| Not living with partner/spouse but living with another adult | 9131 (20.4%) | ||||
| Living with partner/spouse | 26 269 (58.7%) | ||||
| Children in the household | |||||
| No | 33 197 (74.1%) | ||||
| Yes | 11 578 (25.9%) | ||||
| Employment status | |||||
| Employed | 25 459 (56.9%) | ||||
| Unemployed and seeking work | 1504 (3.4%) | ||||
| Not working (student/homemaker) | 4625 (10.3%) | ||||
| Unable to work owing to disability | 3124 (7.0%) | ||||
| Retired | 10 063 (22.5%) | ||||
| Educational attainment | |||||
| Degrees | 15 167 (33.9%) | ||||
| GCSE/A-levels | 26 532 (59.3%) | ||||
| No qualifications | 3076 (6.9%) | ||||
| Income | |||||
| N-miss | 4635 | 443 | 187 | 872 | 261 |
| <£16 000 | 8324 (20.7%) | ||||
| £16 000–29 999 | 11 165 (27.8%) | ||||
| £30 000–59 999 | 12 685 (31.6%) | ||||
| £60 000–89 999 | 4794 (11.9%) | ||||
| >£90 000 | 3173 (7.9%) | ||||
| Overcrowding | |||||
| No | 42 853 (95.7%) | ||||
| Yes | 1922 (4.3%) | ||||
| Mental health diagnosis | |||||
| No | 36 018 (80.4%) | ||||
| Yes | 8757 (19.6%) | ||||
| Chronic physical illness | |||||
| No | 27 588 (61.6%) | ||||
| Yes | 17 187 (38.4%) | ||||
| COVID-19 diagnosis | |||||
| No | |||||
| Yes | |||||
| Depressive symptoms (PHQ-9) | |||||
| Minimal/mild (0–9) | |||||
| Moderate (10–19) | |||||
| Severe (20+) | |||||
| Anxiety symptoms (GAD-7) | |||||
| Minimal/mild (0–10) | |||||
| Moderate (11–15) | |||||
| Severe (16+) | |||||
| Self-harm/suicidal thoughts | |||||
| Yes | 7984 (17.8%) | – | |||
| Self-harm behaviours | |||||
| Yes | 2174 (4.9%) | – | |||
| Psychological/physical abuse | |||||
| Yes | 4121 (9.2%) | – | – | ||
| Waves of data collection | |||||
| Mean (s.d.) | 2.1 (1.1) | 2.1 (1.1) | 2.0 (1.1) | 2.1 (1.1) | 2.0 (1.1) |
| Range | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 | 1–5 |
| Formal/structured support | |||||
| Taking medication (e.g. anti-depressants) | 5534 (15.9%) | 812 (28.3%) | 309 (34.4%) | 2157 (36.7%) | 721 (47.8%) |
| Speaking with a mental health professional | 908 (2.6%) | 197 (6.8%) | 94 (10.4%) | 465 (7.9%) | 219 (14.5%) |
| Speaking with a healthcare professional | 495 (1.4%) | 137 (4.8%) | 72 (8.0%) | 278 (4.7%) | 115 (7.7%) |
| Speaking to somebody on a support helpline | 189 (0.5%) | 60 (2.1%) | 20 (2.3%) | 123 (2.1%) | 69 (4.6%) |
| Online mental health programme (e.g. CBT) | 321 (0.9%) | 62 (2.2%) | 24 (2.7%) | 135 (2.3%) | 60 (4.0%) |
| Any formal/structured support | 6331 (18.2%) | 990 (34.5%) | 387 (43.1%) | 2486 (42.3%) | 858 (56.9%) |
| Informal support | |||||
| Online mental health forum | 321 (0.9%) | 83 (2.9%) | 28 (3.1%) | 182 (3.1%) | 82 (5.4%) |
| Other mental health resources (e.g. self-help books, videos, or apps) | 1489 (4.3%) | 252 (8.8%) | 70 (7.8%) | 491 (8.3%) | 160 (10.6%) |
| Mental health self-care (e.g. mindfulness or meditation) | 7429 (21.4%) | 882 (30.7%) | 149 (16.6%) | 1687 (28.7%) | 392 (26.0%) |
| Speaking about mental health to a friend or family member | 6644 (19.1%) | 821 (28.6%) | 230 (25.7%) | 1915 (32.6%) | 522 (34.6%) |
| Any informal support | 10 951 (31.5%) | 1323 (46.1%) | 331 (36.9%) | 2734 (46.5%) | 723 (48.0%) |
BAME, Black, Asian and minority ethnic; CBT, cognitive–behavioural therapy; N-miss, number of missing data.
Weighted sample characteristics: the values represent the percentage of participants who responded positively to each item. Values in bold in (a) represent statistically significant (P < 0.05) group comparisons (i.e. Psychological/physical abuse: No versus Yes; Suicidal/self-harm thoughts: No versus Yes; Self-harm behaviours: No versus Yes). P-values of group comparisons were calculated using chi-squared tests. Row percentages are showed in (a), whereas column percentages are shown in (b). The sample characteristics were calculated using data from the first wave of data collection for each participant. For abuse, self-harm and mental health support, we instead focused on any reporting during the first month of lockdown.