| Literature DB >> 33884723 |
Soyun Hong1, Heejung Kim2, Min Kyung Park3.
Abstract
The coronavirus pandemic highlights the urgent need for increased support related to mental health concerns. This study aimed to synthesize the findings of empirical studies reporting the post-traumatic stress symptoms in the general population during the coronavirus pandemic. Whittemore and Knafl's (Journal of Advanced Nursing, 52, 546, 2005) integrative review methodology was used to analyse and synthesize the peer-reviewed studies. Five electronic databases, PubMed, CINAHL, PsychINFO, Cochrane and Google Scholar were searched using terms related to the coronavirus pandemic and post-traumatic stress symptoms. The quality of the studies was screened and evaluated using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. The sample size of the 16 studies included in this review ranged from 41 to 3480 participants, with a total of 18 039 participants. The majority of the participants' ages ranged from 30 to 39 years, and 57% of the participants were female. The following factors related to post-traumatic stress symptoms during the coronavirus pandemic were identified as follows: (i) risk factors included social discrimination, fear of uncontrolled contagion and financial burden or economic instability; and, (ii) protective factors included social support and timely government action. A traumatic experience itself can trigger the onset of post-traumatic stress disorder; however, depending on the risk and protection factors, each individual can experience different post-traumatic stress symptoms. Thus, mental health nurses should comprehensively understand how to reduce the influence of risk factors and enhance protective factors when dealing with the pandemic and related trauma. This study's findings are beneficial for identifying, preventing and managing post-traumatic stress symptoms associated with the coronavirus and future pandemics.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; mental health; pandemics; post-traumatic stress disorders; psychological adaptation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33884723 PMCID: PMC8250702 DOI: 10.1111/inm.12875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Nurs ISSN: 1445-8330 Impact factor: 5.100
Search syntax for electronic databases
| Database | Syntax |
|---|---|
| PubMed | (COVID‐19) OR (Coronavirus Infections[MeSH Terms]) AND (posttraumatic stress*[Title/Abstract]) OR (post traumatic stress*[Title/Abstract]) OR (PTSD[Title/Abstract])) OR (PTSS[Title/Abstract]) OR (Stress Disorders, Post‐Traumatic[MeSH Terms]) |
| CINAHL | "covid‐19" OR (MH "Coronavirus Infections") OR (MH "Coronavirus") AND AB (ptss or post traumatic stress or trauma) OR AB (ptsd or post traumatic stress disorder or posttraumatic stress disorder or post‐traumatic stress disorder) OR AB post traumatic stress disorder symptoms OR (MH "Stress Disorders, Post‐Traumatic") |
| PsycINFO | (covid‐19 OR Coronavirus*) AND (ab(posttraumatic stress*) OR ab(post traumatic stress*) OR ab(PTSD) OR ab(PTSS) OR ab(stress disorders, post‐traumatic) OR ab(post‐traumatic stress*) OR ab(stress disorders, posttraumatic) |
| Cochrane | COVID‐19 OR Coronavirus* OR Coronavirus Infections AND (post‐traumatic stress*):ti,ab,kw OR (posttraumatic stress*):ti,ab,kw OR (post traumatic stress*):ti,ab,kw OR (PTSD):ti,ab,kw OR (Stress Disorders, Post‐Traumatic):ti,ab,kw |
Eligible criteria to select the analysed studies
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Direct or indirect exposure to COVID‐19 general population | Specific group (i.e. health worker, patient with a chronic disease) |
| Focus on post‐traumatic stress symptoms | Measure other types of trauma |
| Adult aged ≥18 years old | Children and adolescents (age <18 years) |
| English language | Languages other than English |
| Quantitative peer‐reviewed articles | Thesis, dissertation, conferences’ abstracts, review, book chapters, policy, guidelines, editorials, commentaries, qualitative research and case study |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Characteristics and analytic of included studies (N = 16)
| Author(s), year (country) | Study aim | Study design | Time of measurement | Participants | Quality rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bo, 2020 (China) | To examine the pattern of PTSS and patients’ attitude towards crisis mental health services | Cross‐sectional | Online assessment prior to their discharge from quarantine facilities | 714 adult patients diagnosed with clinically stable COVID‐19 | MMAT** |
| Di Crosta, 2020 (Italy) | To examine the prevalence of high psychological impact due to the COVID‐19 on the general population | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 1253 Italian adults between 18 and 64 years old | MMAT**** |
| Forte, 2020 (Italy) | To examine the psychological impact of the COVID‐19 and the psychopathological outcomes related to the first phase of this emergency | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 2286 citizens aged ≥18 years old | MMAT**** |
| González‐Sanguino, 2020 (Spain) | To examine the psychological impact of the COVID‐19 in the Spanish population | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 3480 citizens aged ≥18 years old | MMAT**** |
| Guo, 2020a (China) | To examine sleep problems, depression, and PTSS among the general population during the COVID‐19, and coping behaviours | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID 19 outbreak | 2441 citizens aged ≥18 years old | MMAT**** |
| Guo, 2020b (China) | To examine the psychological impact of hospitalized patients with COVID‐19 and how it relates to the presence bio‐markers of peripheral inflammation |
Cross‐sectional methods approach Mixed‐method triangulation design | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 206 patients diagnosed with mild cases of COVID‐19 | MMAT*** |
| Hamam, 2020 (Israeli) | To examine the relation between PTG and PTSS attributed to prior exposure | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 528 Israeli trauma survivors | MMAT*** |
| Karatzias, 2020 (Ireland) | To examine the level of comorbidity with depression and anxiety and the sociodemographic risk factors associated with COVID‐19 related PTSD in the general population | Cross‐sectional | 31 days after the first confirmed case of COVID‐19 in the Republic of Ireland was reported | 1041 citizens aged ≥18 years old | MMAT**** |
| Li, 2020 (China) | To examine the psychological impact and PTSD and association with the coping strategy types | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 1109 citizens aged ≥18 years old | MMAT**** |
| Liu, 2020a (USA) | To examine factors associated with depression, anxiety, and PTSS in young adults | Cross‐sectional | 1 month after the United States declared a state of emergency due to COVID‐19 | 898 citizens 18–30 years old | MMAT*** |
| Liu, 2020b (China) | To examine the prevalence, predictors, gender difference existing of PTSS in China hardest hit areas during COVID‐19 | Cross‐sectional | COVID‐19 outbreak of announced by World Health Organization | 285 citizens aged >18 years old | MMAT*** |
| Liu, 2020c (China) | To examine the prevalence and risk factors for mental health problems among discharged COVID‐19 patients | Cross‐sectional |
Hospital discharged COVID‐19 patients | 675 adult patients diagnosed with COVID‐19 | MMAT**** |
| Qi, 2020 (China) | To examine the prevalence and associated risk factors for psychological impact and fatigue in COVID‐19 patients | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 41 patients diagnosed with non‐severe types of COVID‐19 | MMAT** |
| Tan, 2020 (China) | To examine the psychological impact and psychoneuro immunity prevention measures of a workforce returning to work | Cross‐sectional | During the COVID‐19 outbreak | 673 workforce | MMAT*** |
| Wang, 2020 (China) | To examine risk and protective factors, and the temporal psychological impact and adverse mental health status during the initial outbreak and peak of COVID‐19 pandemic | Longitudinal study | During the initial outbreak and peak of COVID‐19 outbreak | 1738 citizens | MMAT**** |
| Wytrychiewicz, 2020 (Poland) | To examine the psychological impact in coping context, and beliefs related to the pandemic situation, and stressors arising from the risk of infection, and lifestyle changes | Cross‐sectional | 2 weeks after the first case occurred in Poland | 671 citizens aged >18 years old | MMAT*** |
COVID‐19, coronavirus disease 19; MMAT, mixed methods appraisal tool; PTG, post‐traumatic growth; PTSD, post‐traumatic stress disorder; PTSS, post‐traumatic stress symptoms.
The scores meeting one criterion were represented by (*), and those meeting all criteria were represented by (*****).
Description of PTSS and PTSD results by COVID‐19 (N = 16)
| Author(s), year | Item | Measurement & criterion | Rates | Risk factors | Protection factors |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bo, 2020 | PTSS | PCL‐C ≥ 50 | 96.2% PTSS | (a) Demeaning news coverage in communication programmes, (b) social discrimination | |
| Di Crosta, 2020 | PTSD | IES‐R ≥ 33 | 35.6% high‐PTSD | (a) Fear of contagion, (b) female, (c) higher neuroticism, (d) lower levels of education, (e) lower perceived economic stability | (a) Neuroticism |
| Forte, 2020 | PTSD | IES‐R ≥ 33 | 27.7% PTSD | (a) Aged 18 to 49, (b) female, (c) fear of contagion, (d) information of people infected by COVID‐19, (e) information of people in ICU for COVID‐19, (f) information of people died for COVID‐19 | |
| González‐Sanguino, 2020 | PTSD | PCL‐C‐2 | 15.8% moderate to extreme PTSD | (a) COVID‐19 symptoms/diagnosis, (b) discrimination, (c) employment during COVID‐19, (d) female, (e) living with someone infected, (f) loneliness, (g) previous illness | (a) Aged 60 to 80, (b) good economic situation, (c) retired from work, (d) satisfaction with health information, (e) sense of belonging, (f) self‐compassion, (g) social support, (h) spiritual well‐being |
| Guo, 2020a | PTSS | PCL‐5 | 79.6% PTSS | (a) Emotion‐focused coping, (b) lower perceived economic stability | (a) Problem‐focused coping |
| Guo, 2020b | PTSS | PCL‐5 ≥ 33 | 1.0% PTSS | (a) Blaming others, having strong negative feelings (i.e. fear, guilt, and helplessness), (b) blaming of others, health authorities, (c) emotion‐focused coping | |
| Hamam, 2020 | PTSD | PCL‐5 ≥ 33 | 13.4% PTSD | (a) Female, (b) living alone, (c) lower levels of education, (d) poor health status, (e) younger age | |
| Karatzias, 2020 | PTSD | ITQ | 17.7% PTSD | (a) Anxiety, (b) depression, (c) fear of contagion, (d) living in a city, (e) living with children, (f) male, (g) younger age | |
| Li, 2020 | PTSD | IES‐R ≥ 20 | 67.1% PTSD | (a) Problem‐focused coping, (b) risk of psychiatric disorders | |
| Liu, 2020a | PTSD | PCL‐C ≥ 45 | 31.8% PTSD | (a) Distress tolerance, (b) loneliness, (c) fear of contagion | (a) Family social support, (b) instrumental social support |
| Liu, 2020b | PTSS | PCL‐5 ≥ 33 | 7% PTSS | (a) Female, (b) living in a city, (c) poorer sleep quality (d) susceptible to infection | |
| Liu, 2020c | PTSD | PCL‐5 | 12.4% PTSD | (a) Discrimination, (b)family member died, (c) living with children, (d) severity level of COVID‐19 pneumonia | |
| Qi, 2020 | PTSD | PCL‐C ≥ 50 | 12.2% PTSD | (a) Emotion‐focused coping, (b) social discrimination | (a) Social support |
| Tan, 2020 | PTSD | IES‐R ≥ 24 | 10.8% PTSD | (a) Divorced, separated, widowed, (b) poor health status | (a) Always covered their mouths while coughing |
| Wang, 2020 | PTSD | IES‐R > 24 | (a) Poor health status, (b) history of chronic illness | (a) Avoidance of sharing utensils during meals, (b) confidence doctor's ability to diagnose or recognize COVID‐19, (c) likelihood of survival, (d) observing better hygiene practices, (e) perceived likelihood of contracting COVID‐19, (f) satisfaction with health information | |
| Wytrychiewicz, 2020 | PTSD | PCL‐5 ≥ 33 | 22.7% PTSD | (a) Concern about prolong isolation, (b) dyspnoea (c) fatigue, (d) fear, (e) fear of contagion, (f) headache | (a) Assessment of government actions to reduce the risk of infection, (b) food fully prepared |
COVID‐19, coronavirus disease 19; IES‐R, Impact of Event Scale‐Revised; ITQ, International Trauma Questionnaire; PCL‐C, Post‐traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist – Civilian version; PCL‐C‐2, Civilian version of the Post‐traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist‐Reduced version; PCL‐5, Post‐traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist for DSM‐5; PTSD, post‐traumatic stress disorder; PTSS, post‐traumatic stress symptoms.