| Literature DB >> 33924365 |
Pasquale Caponnetto1,2,3, Alessandra Benenati1,3, Marilena G Maglia1,2,3.
Abstract
The COVID-19 epidemic posed great challenges to the healthcare community. To contain the epidemiological emergency, confinement measures were instituted, affecting the entire population. The lack of social contact, as well as the disruption of daily life, caused the exacerbation of anxiety and depressive symptoms. The present review of the literature aims to investigate what the effects of the pandemic have been on patients with schizophrenia, hypothesizing, an exacerbation of psychotic symptomatology (positive, negative, disorganized symptoms). Between November 2020 and January 2021, 5353 articles were collected and analyzed from the databases of the ResearchGate, Pubmed, and Psycnet websites, subjected to PRISMA methodology. Of these, 11 were evaluated for eligibility, but only three were included in the study because they met all inclusion criteria. The research did not confirm the expected results, showing that any kind of worsening of schizophrenic symptomatology involved the study samples. However, interesting outcomes were highlighted, such as a significant increase in general well-being during the early period of the pandemic, especially by women, or an increase in CPR (C-reactive Protein) levels in the blood, signaling an inflammatory state. Although the systematic review refuted the initial hypothesis, this must be a starting point: the topic is recent and these findings leave ample room for further investigation, particularly in long-term longitudinal research. It is possible that the true response to this disruption of daily life that occurred only during the past year may manifest itself later in time. On the other hand, interesting outcomes have been brought to light that may provide further interesting research insights.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; confinement; schizophrenia; social distancing; social isolation; symptomatology; systematic review
Year: 2021 PMID: 33924365 PMCID: PMC8070199 DOI: 10.3390/bs11040049
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 flow diagram.
Articles included in the review. Legend: PANSS = The Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale; MADRS = Montgomery–Asberg Depression-Rating Scale; YMRS = Young Mania Rating Scale; SUMD = Scale to Assess Unawareness of Mental Disorder; EMA = Ecological Momentary Assessment; CPSS = Chinese Perceived Stress Scale; HAMD = Hamilton Depression Scale; HAMA = Hamilton Anxiety Scale; PSQI = Pittsburgh sleep quality index; FKS = Body Dysmorphic Symptoms Inventory; CAHSA = Continuum of Auditory Hallucinations—State Assessment; DASS-D = Depression Anxiety Stress Scales—Depression Subscale; EDE-Q = Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire; PHQ = Patient Health Questionnaire—Panic Module and Stress Subscale; PSWQ-d = Penn State Worry Questionnaire; SIAS = Social Interaction Anxiety Scale; SPS = Social Phobia Scale, WI = Whitely Index; Y-BOCS = Yale–Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale—Symptom Checklist.
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| Amy E. Pinkham, Robert A. Ackerman, Colin A. Depp, Philip D. Harvey, | 2020 | A Longitudinal Investigation of the Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic on the | USA | Longitudinal study | 148 individuals suffering from serious mental illness; 92 individuals suffering from schizophrenia | PANSS, MADRS, YMRS, SUMD, EMA questionnaire | Contrary to expectations, there were no significant changes in positive, negative, or disorganized symptomatology compared with the pre-pandemic situation. In contrast, there is a significant increase in well-being in the early pandemic period. |
| Jun Ma, Tingting Hua, Kuan Zeng, Baoliang Zhong, Gang Wang, Xuebing Liu | 2020 | Influence of social isolation caused by coronavirus | China | Case-control study | 30 patients with schizophrenia subjected to isolation as the experimental group; 30 patients with schizophrenia not subjected to isolation as the control group | CPSS, PANSS, HAMD, HAMA, PSQI | The results of the study show that patients in isolation experience higher levels of stress, anxiety, and depressive symptomatology, compared to patients not in isolation. However, PANSS scale scores between the two groups are not significantly different, meaning that no relevant changes in schizophrenic symptomatology are detected. |
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| Hannah L. Quittkat, Rainer Düsing, Friederike-Johanna Holtmann, Ulrike Buhlmann, Jennifer Svaldi, Sija Vocks | 2020 | Perceived Impact of Covid-19 Across | Germany | Quantitative research (questionnaire) | 2233 individuals diagnosed with mental illness. 6 individuals having schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. | FKS, CAHSA, DASS-D, EDE-Q, PHQ, PSWQ-d, SIAS, SPS, WI, Y-BOCS | Psychotic symptoms, compared to the pre-pandemic situation, do not appear to have undergone any modification. However, this could be due to the very small sample (only 6 individuals). |