| Literature DB >> 34055328 |
Paula A Muehlschlegel1, Edward Aj Parkinson2, Randell Yl Chan3, Madelynne A Arden4, Christopher J Armitage5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infectious outbreaks, most recently coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), have required pervasive public health strategies, termed lockdown measures, including quarantine, social distancing, and closure of workplaces and educational establishments. Although evidence analysing immediate effects is expanding, repercussions following lockdown measures remain poorly understood. This systematic review aims to analyse biopsychosocial consequences after lockdown measures end according to short, medium, and long-term impacts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34055328 PMCID: PMC8141332 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.11.05008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Figure 1Study selection.
Study characteristics
| Author | Country | Design | Participants | Lockdown measure | Lockdown measure duration | Post-lockdown measure assessment time point* | Disease | Primary outcomes | Measurement tools | Quality rating† |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bai et al (2004) [ | Taiwan | Cross-sectional | 338 health care workers | Quarantine (type unclear) | 9 days | Up to 10 days | SARS | Acute stress disorder | Study-specific questionnaire adapted from DSM-IV | 3 |
| Cava et al (2005) [ | Canada | Qualitative | 21 Toronto residents | Home quarantine | 9 days (mean length) | Up to several months | SARS | Stigma, behavioural changes and psychological well-being | Interview | 5 |
| Chandola et al (2020) [ | UK | Longitudinal | Between 13754 and 17761 adults in the general population | UK national lockdown | 3-4 months | 3-4 weeks | COVID-19 | Common mental disorders | General Health Questionnaire-12 | 4 |
| Chen et al (2007) [ | Taiwan | Cohort study | 172 hospital staff; 90 health care workers caring for SARS patients and 82 administrative staff | Home quarantine and working non-SARS shifts | 28 days (14 days quarantine, 14 days non-SARS shifts) | 2 weeks | SARS | Physical functioning, role physical, bodily pain, vitality, role emotional, social functioning, general health and mental health | Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short Form Survey | 3 |
| Cho et al (2020) [ | South Korea | Cross-sectional | 67 haemodialysis patients | Home or hospital quarantine in a single room or cohort ward | 14.8 days (mean length) | 1 year | MERS | PTSD | Impact of Event Scale-Revised Korean version | 3 |
| Chong et al (2004) [ | Taiwan | Cross-sectional | 1257 health care workers, 79 of whom had been quarantined | Dormitory quarantine | 14 days | Up to 7 weeks | SARS | PTSD and mental health | Impact of Event Scale and Chinese Health Questionnaire | 2 |
| Daly & Robinson (2020) [ | USA | Longitudinal | 7319 nationally representative adults | USA national and state-level lockdown | Variable by state | 1-3 months | COVID-19 | Psychological distress | Patient Health Questionnaire-4 | 5 |
| DiGiovanni et al (2004) [ | Canada | Qualitative | 1509 Toronto residents, 6 focus groups with 9- 13 persons each | Home quarantine | 10 days | 4 months | SARS | Stigma, behavioural changes and psychological well-being | Focus group | 4 |
| Duy et al (2020) [ | Vietnam | Cross-sectional | 61 health care workers | Hospital quarantine | 23 days | 6-9 days | COVID-19 | Stigma, depression, anxiety and stress | Study-specific questionnaire adapted from HIV Stigma Scale and Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 | 4 |
| Grigoletto et al (2020) [ | Italy | Longitudinal | 338 adolescent and young adult emergency department attendances | Italy national lockdown | 2-3 months | Up to 3 weeks | COVID-19 | Severe alcohol intoxications | Blood alcohol content | 5 |
| Grover et al (2020) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 144 ophthalmologists | India national lockdown and postponement of elective surgeries | 6 weeks | Up to 2 weeks | COVID-19 | Depression, anxiety and stress | Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 | 3 |
| Hawryluck et al (2004) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional | 129 Toronto residents, 88 of whom were health care workers | Home or workplace quarantine | 10 days (median length) | Median 36 days | SARS | PTSD and depression | Impact of Event Scale-Revised and Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression | 3 |
| Jalloh et al (2018) [ | Sierra Leone | Cross-sectional | 3564 members of the general population, 1165 of whom had known somebody quarantined | Quarantine (type unclear) | 21 days | Up to 14 months | Ebola | PTSD, anxiety and depression | Impact of Event Scale-Revised and Patient Health Questionnaire-4 | 3 |
| Jeong et al (2016) [ | South Korea | Longitudinal | 1656 South Korean residents | Home, workplace or hospital quarantine | 14 days | 4-6 months | MERS | Anxiety and anger | General Anxiety Disorder-7 and State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2 | 4 |
| Kim et al (2019) [ | South Korea | Longitudinal | 83 haemodialysis patients and 12 health care workers | Home or hospital quarantine | 17 days | 1 & 3 months | MERS | Physical and emotional stress and haemodialysis efficacy | Multiple plasma biochemical markers | 3 |
| Ko et al (2006) [ | Taiwan | Cross-sectional | 1499 individuals, 398 of whom exhibited isolated behaviour | Quarantine (type unclear) | Length unclear | 1 months | SARS | Depression | Taiwanese Depression Questionnaire | 2 |
| Koller et al (2006) [ | Canada | Qualitative | 23; 10 parents, 5 children and 8 health care workers | Hospital quarantine | Length unclear | Up to several months | SARS | Behavioural changes and psychological well-being | Interview | 5 |
| Lee et al (2005) [ | Hong Kong | Mixed methods | 903 Hong Kong residents | Isolation camp quarantine | 3-4 months | 1-5 months | SARS | Stigma | Study-specific questionnaire | 3 |
| Lee et al (2018) [ | South Korea | Longitudinal | 359 health care workers working during hospital shutdown and 77 health care workers 1 months following shutdown | Hospital lockdown | 24 days | 1 months | MERS | PTSD | Impact of Event Scale-Revised Korean version | 3 |
| Lei et al (2020) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 1593 individuals in Southwestern China, 420 of whom had been affected by quarantine | Quarantine (type unclear) | Length unclear | Up to 3 weeks | COVID-19 | Anxiety and depression | Self-rating Anxiety Scale and Self-rating Depression Scale | 4 |
| Li et al (2020) [ | China | Longitudinal | 173 university students | China national, provincial and citywide lockdowns | 2-3 months | Up to 3 months | COVID-19 | Depression, anxiety, stress and novelty seeking | Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 and Langer Mindfulness Scale novelty seeking subscale | 3 |
| Liu et al (2012) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 549 health care workers, 103 of whom had been quarantined | Home or workplace quarantine | Length unclear | 3 years | SARS | Depression | Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression | 3 |
| Lu et al (2020) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 1417 Wuhan residents; 387 health care workers and 1035 members of the general population | China national, provincial and citywide lockdowns | 2-3 months | 2 months | COVID-19 | PTSD, anxiety and depression | PTSD Checklist-Civilian version, General Anxiety Disorder-7 and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 | 4 |
| Marjanovic (2007) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional | 333 nurses | Home or workplace quarantine | Length unclear | Up to 7 months | SARS | Emotional exhaustion, anger and avoidance behaviour | Maslach Burnout Inventory-General Survey, State-Trait Anger Expression Inventory-2 and study-specific questionnaire | 4 |
| Mihashi et al (2009) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 187; printing company workers, university faculty staff and students | Citywide lockdown | Length unclear | 7-8 months | SARS | Psychological disorders | General Health Questionnaire-30 | 3 |
| Park et al (2020) [ | South Korea | Cohort study | 116 haemodialysis patients | Home or hospital quarantine in a single room or cohort ward | 15 days (mean length) | 3-6 months | MERS | Clinical parameters and haemodialysis efficacy | Blood pressure and multiple plasma biochemical markers | 3 |
| Ping et al (2008) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 549 health care workers, 103 of whom had been quarantined | Home or workplace quarantine | Length unclear | 3 years | SARS | Alcohol abuse and dependence | National Household Survey on Drug Abuse | 3 |
| Ping et al (2009) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 549 health care workers, 103 of whom had been quarantined | Home or workplace quarantine | Length unclear | 3 years | SARS | PTSD | Impact of Event Scale-Revised | 3 |
| Probst et al (2020) [ | Austria | Longitudinal | 445 adults in the general population | Austria national lockdown | 2-3 months | 1-3 weeks | COVID-19 | Depression | Patient Health Questionnaire-9 | 3 |
| Reynolds et al (2007) [ | Canada | Cross-sectional | 1057; 269 health care workers, 291 patients, 327 visitors, 139 other | Home or workplace quarantine | 8.3 days (median length) | 1-4 months | SARS | PTSD, stigma, behavioural changes and psychological well-being | Impact of Event Scale-Revised and study-specific questionnaire | 5 |
| Ritish et al (2020) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 1602 international air passengers | Home or institutional quarantine | 14 days | Up to 1 week | COVID-19 | Anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation and sleep disturbance | Interview | 3 |
| Robertson et al (2004) [ | Canada | Qualitative | 10 health care workers | Home or workplace quarantine | 10 days | Up to 4 months | SARS | Stigma, behavioural changes and psychological well-being | Interview | 2 |
| Sprang & Silman (2013) [ | USA & Canada | Mixed methods | 398 parents | Home quarantine and social distancing | Length unclear | 1-6 months | H1N1 & SARS | PTSD | PTSD Checklist-Civilian version and PTSD-Reaction Index | 2 |
| Tan et al (2020) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 673 workforce members | Workplace closure | 14 days | Up to 1 month | COVID-19 | PTSD, depression, anxiety, stress, insomnia and psychological well-being | Impact of Event Scale-Revised, Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21, Insomnia Severity Index and study-specific questionnaires | 4 |
| Wang et al (2020) [ | China | Cross-sectional | 1210 individuals in cities across China, 26 of whom had been recently quarantined | Home quarantine | Length unclear | Up to 2 weeks | COVID-19 | PTSD, depression, anxiety and stress | Impact of Event Scale-Revised and Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 | 3 |
| Yip et al (2010)[ | Hong Kong | Case-control | 66 elderly suicides; 22 SARS-related, 44 randomly selected controls | Social distancing | Length unclear | Up to 5 months | SARS | Isolation experience, social contact and psychological well-being | Case-note review | 5 |
| Yoon et al (2016)[ | South Korea | Case report | 6231 Gyeonggi residents | Quarantine (type unclear) | Length unclear | Up to several months | MERS | Mental health service utilisation | Audit | 5 |
| Zarah et al (2020) [ | USA | Cross-sectional | 3133 American adults | USA national and state-level lockdown | Variable by state | 4 months | COVID-19 | Dietary habits | Study-specific questionnaire | 4 |
| Zhang et al (2020) [ | China | Longitudinal | 1994 Chinese adults | China national, provincial and citywide lockdowns | 2-3 months | 4 months | COVID-19 | Dietary habits | Study-specific questionnaire | 3 |
| Zhou et al (2020) [ | China | Longitudinal | 279 Wuhan residents | Citywide lockdown | 2-3 months | Up to 6 weeks | COVID-19 | Depression, psychological need satisfaction, and loneliness | Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression, Need Satisfaction Scale and Revised Loneliness Scale | 2 |
SARS – severe acute respiratory syndrome, COVID-19 – coronavirus disease 2019, MERS – Middle East respiratory syndrome, H1N1 – influenza A virus subtype H1N1, PTSD – post-traumatic stress disorder, DSM – Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
*Time points calculated from start of infectious outbreak to data collection period if lockdown measure duration unclear.
†Quality score ranged from meeting none of five criteria (0) to meeting all criteria (5).
Figure 2Biopsychosocial consequences identified after lockdown measures end from 40 included studies. HCW – health care worker, PTSD – post-traumatic stress disorder.
Suggested strategies to mitigate harmful biopsychosocial consequences of lockdown measures from included studies
| Tailored interventions according to time-elapsed, including acute psychological support and longer-term management targeting maladaptive coping mechanisms [ |
| Early identification and active follow-up of high risk and vulnerable groups [ |
| Public health authorities to deliver clear and accurate information and educational resources [ |
| Provision of financial aid, supplies, and hygiene-enhancing policies [ |
| Employer attention to employees’ physical and psychological well-being [ |
| Promotion of social connectivity, networking, and support [ |