| Literature DB >> 33781286 |
Tooba Lateef1, Jiyao Chen2, Muhammad Tahir3, Teba Abdul Lateef4,5, Bryan Z Chen6, Jizhen Li7, Stephen X Zhang8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The recent outbreak of COVID-19 has impacted adversely upon the mental health of millions of people worldwide. Impacts on the mental health conditions and the associated predictors relating to adults in Pakistan, the fifth most populous country in the world, during the COVID-19 remain understudied. Our aim was to investigate distress, anxiety, and overall mental health and their associated predictors among Pakistani adults in this pandemic. We specifically examine mental health issues based on the distance from the epicenter, (a predictor that has revealed opposing evidence in other countries) based on the theories of typhoon eye effect and ripple effect. The sample consisted of 601 adults who were surveyed online about 2.5 months into the outbreak across Pakistan with varying distances from the epicenter of COVID-19 of Karachi.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Family size; Mental health; Pakistan; Ripple effect; Typhoon eye effect
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33781286 PMCID: PMC8006139 DOI: 10.1186/s12992-021-00685-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Global Health ISSN: 1744-8603 Impact factor: 10.401
Predicting working adults’ depression disorder, anxiety disorder, and overall mental health score (N = 601)
| Variables | n (%) | Logistic regression | Linear regression | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Distress | Anxiety | Mental health | |||||
| p-value | p-value | ||||||
| | 315 (52.4) | .74 (.42–1.33) | .315 | 1.09 (.72–1.65) | .688 | −.98 (− 2.62–.64) | .233 |
| | 286 (47.6) | ||||||
| | 30 (5.0) | .97 (.92–1.02) | .178 | .98 (.93–1.03) | .421 | .23*** (.06–.40) | .007 |
| | 339 (57.4) | ||||||
| | 156 (26.0) | ||||||
| | 70 (11.6) | ||||||
| | 407 (67.7) | ----------------------------Reference----------------------------- | |||||
| | 185 (30.8) | 1.09 (.46–2.59) | .845 | .89 (.47–1.69) | .722 | −.35 (− 2.66–1.97) | .770 |
| | 9 (1.7) | 2.02 (.18–22.8) | .570 | .69 (.08–6.45) | .748 | −1.91 (− 10.70–6.86) | .668 |
| | 2 (0.3) | . 95 (.51–1.76) | .865 | 1.10 (.67–1.80) | .698 | −1.96 (−3.96–.03) | .054 |
| | 1 (0.2) | ||||||
| | 175 (29.0) | ||||||
| | 424 (70.5) | ||||||
| 0.77 [0.79] | .66 (.45–.96) | .028 | .81 (.63–1.05) | .112 | 1.28 (.31–2.25) | .010 | |
| | 0.27 [0.51] | .54 (.18–1.6) | .265 | .58 (.27–1.24) | .160 | 3.51 (.74–6.28) | .013 |
| | 5 (0.8) | .76 (.61–.94) | .013 | .91 (.82–1.00) | .052 | .19 (−.13–.50) | .245 |
| | 17 (2.8) | ||||||
| | 54 (9.0) | ||||||
| | 99 (16.5) | ||||||
| | 134 (22.3) | ||||||
| | 122 (20.3) | ||||||
| | 58 (9.7) | ||||||
| | 41 (6.8) | ||||||
| | 20 (3.3) | ||||||
| | 51 (8.49) | ||||||
| 1.25 (1.04–1.49) | .017 | 1.14 (1.03–1.26) | .015 | −.71 (−1.04 – -.38) | .000 | ||
The comparisons of adults’ distress and anxiety issues during the COVID-19 pandemic across studies
| Measure | Sample description; data collection time | Prevalence | Comparison with this study | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kessler-6 | 369 adults in China, Feb 20–21, 2020 | 6.2% | −3.0% (−6.3 to 0.6%) | [ |
| Kessler-10 | 500 adults in Italy, April 10–13, 2020 | 18.6% | 9.4% (5.5 to 13.3%) | [ |
| Kessler-6 | 1599 adults in China, Feb 1–4, 2020 | Mean (SD): 7.7 (±7.7) | 2.2% (1.49–2.8%) T (2198) = 6.4, | [ |
| Kessler-6 | 2032 adults in the U.S., late April 2020 | 27.7% | 18.5% (15.3 to 21.4%) | [ |
| GAD-2 | 3088 adults in 32 provinces of China, Feb 20–27, 2020 | 13.2% | −5.83% (− 2.6% to − 9.3%) | [ |
| GAD-2 | 3480 adults in Spain, March 21–27, 2020 | 21.6% | 2.3% (− 1.3 to 5.5%) | [ |
| GAD-7 | 103 adults in China, Feb 10–28, 2020 | 22.3% | 3.3% (− 4.4 to 12.7%) | [ |
| GAD-7 | 98 adults in Zhongshan, Guangdong in China, Feb 15–29, 2020 | 23.4% | 4.4% (−3.6 to 14.1%) | [ |
| GAD-7 | 4872 adults in China, Jan 31–Feb 2, 2020 | 22.6% | 3.6% (.1–6.8%) | [ |
| GAD-2 | 1577 adults in Wuhan, China, Feb 18–24, 2020 | 23.8% | 4.8% (.9–8.5%) | [ |
| GAD-7 | 1556 seniors older than 60 years in China | 37.1% | 18.1% (14.0–21.9%) | [ |
Fig. 1Predicted value and 95% confidence intervals of distress disorder, anxiety order and overall mental health score by family size and distance to the epicenter