| Literature DB >> 33656173 |
Abstract
Scarce and inconclusive evidence exists on the mental health consequences of the COVID-19 lockdown. This study examined the psychological impact of the lockdown in Greece, resilience levels, use of coping strategies, and identified high-risk groups. A sample of 1661 participants (mean age = 39.5, SD = 12.2; 75.5% females) completed a web-based survey, which was distributed through social networking sites, webpages, and personal contacts. Posttraumatic symptoms, posttraumatic growth, resilience, and coping strategies were assessed. Different population subgroups suffered the impact of lockdown disproportionately. Healthcare workers, females, younger, less educated, and those living alone reported higher rates of posttraumatic stress symptoms. Females achieved more posttraumatic growth and were using coping strategies more frequently than men. Men, older, healthcare workers, and those with a partner were more resilient. Interventions need to be developed to target personal resources, protect vulnerable populations, facilitate posttraumatic growth, and ameliorate wellbeing and quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive and maladaptive coping responses; COVID-19 outbreak; Coronavirus; Mental health; Morbidity; Posttraumatic outcomes; Posttraumatic stress disorder; Psychosocial impact
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33656173 PMCID: PMC8014530 DOI: 10.1002/ijop.12750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Psychol ISSN: 0020-7594
Overall scores, differences and correlates across age, education, gender, marital situation, and sampling group
| Gender | Marital situation | Sampling group | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical scales | α | Overall (n = 1661) | Score range | Age | Education | Men (n = 407) | Women (n = 1252) | Alone (n = 850) | With partner (n = 809) | GP (n = 986) | HCWs (n = 673) |
| PTSD |
| 23.4 (15.7) | 0–80 |
| −.01 | 21.5 (15.9) |
|
| 21.2 (14.1) | 23.4 (15.7) | – |
| STS |
| 40.3 (13.5) | 17–85 | −.02 |
| 36.3 (13.2) |
| 39.9 (13.6) | 40.6 (13.5) |
| 40.3 (13.5) |
|
|
| 12.2 (4.5) | 5–25 | .02 |
| 10.7 (4.2) |
| 12.1 (4.5) | 12.3 (4.6) |
| 12.2 (4.5) |
|
|
| 16.0 (5.5) | 7–35 | −.01 | −.07 | 14.8 (5.6) |
| 15.8 (5.5) | 16.2 (5.6) | ‐ | 16.0 (5.5) |
|
|
| 12.1 (4.7) | 5–25 | −.06 |
| 10.9 (4.6) |
| 12.0 (4.9) | 12.1 (4.7) |
| 12.1 (4.7) |
| PTG |
|
| 0–105 | −.02 | −.03 | 40.7 (24.1) |
| 46.2 (25.3) | 47.3 (25.2) | 46.8 (25.7) | 46.7 (24.6) |
|
|
|
| 0–35 | .03 | .00 | 12.5 (8.6) |
| 14.8 (9.1) | 14.8 (9.3) | 15.1 (9.3) | 14.3 (9.1) |
|
|
|
| 0–25 |
| .03 | 9.3 (6.2) |
| 10.6 (6.6) | 10.4 (6.2) | 10.7 (6.6) | 10.3 (6.2) |
|
|
|
| 0–20 | .01 |
| 8.8 (5.6) |
| 9.7 (5.7) | 10.0 (5.5) | 9.5 (5.8) |
|
|
|
|
| 0–10 | .04 |
| 2.9 (2.8) |
| 3.2 (2.9) |
| 3.4 (3.0) | 3.5 (3.0) |
|
|
|
| 0–15 | .02 | −.02 | 7.1 (4.2) |
| 7.9 (4.3) |
| 8.1 (4.2) | 8.2 (4.2) |
| BRS |
|
| 6–30 |
| −.01 |
| 20.8 (4.4) | 20.0 (4.4) |
| 20.5 (4.5) |
|
| COPE (Total) |
| 66.1 (11.1) | 28–112 |
| .04 | 63.0 (12.2) |
| 66.4 (11.0) | 65.7 (11.1) | 66.4 (11.0) | 65.6 (11.1) |
|
|
| 25.9 (4.9) | 10–40 | .03 | −.02 | 24.8 (5.1) |
| 25.7 (4.8) |
| 25.8 (5.0) | 26.1 (4.8) |
|
|
| 16.7 (3.8) | 6–24 | −.00 | .03 | 16.0 (4.1) |
| 16.6 (3.8) | 16.9 (3.8) | 16.6 (3.8) | 16.9 (3.8) |
|
|
| 23.1 (5.4) | 12–48 |
|
| 21.9 (5.7) |
|
| 22.2 (5.2) |
| 21.8 (5.0) |
Note: Alone = unmarried, separated, divorced, widow/widower; BRS = Brief Resilience Scale; COPE (total) = coping orientation to problems experienced (total score); HCWs = healthcare workers; PTG = posttraumatic growth; PTSD = posttraumatic stress disorder (PCL5 scale); STS = secondary traumatic stress; with partner = cohabiting with any arrangement (cohabitation, cohabitation agreement, marriage); GP = general population.
p < .05.
p < .01.
p < .001.
Emotion‐focused coping strategies included acceptance, use of emotional support, humour, positive reframing, and religion; Problem‐focused coping strategies included active coping, use of instrumental support, planning; Dysfunctional coping strategies included behavioural disengagement, denial, self‐distraction, self‐blame, substance use, and venting).