| Literature DB >> 35794116 |
Tiffany Dal Santo1, Ying Sun1, Yin Wu1,2, Chen He1, Yutong Wang1, Xiaowen Jiang1, Kexin Li1, Olivia Bonardi1, Ankur Krishnan1, Jill T Boruff3, Danielle B Rice1,4, Sarah Markham5, Brooke Levis1,6, Marleine Azar1, Dipika Neupane1, Amina Tasleem1, Anneke Yao1, Ian Thombs-Vite1, Branka Agic7,8, Christine Fahim9, Michael S Martin10,11, Sanjeev Sockalingam7,12, Gustavo Turecki2,13, Andrea Benedetti14,15,16, Brett D Thombs17,18,19,20,21,22,23.
Abstract
Women and gender-diverse individuals have faced disproportionate socioeconomic burden during COVID-19. There have been reports of greater negative mental health changes compared to men based on cross-sectional research that has not accounted for pre-COVID-19 differences. We compared mental health changes from pre-COVID-19 to during COVID-19 by sex or gender. MEDLINE (Ovid), PsycINFO (Ovid), CINAHL (EBSCO), EMBASE (Ovid), Web of Science Core Collection: Citation Indexes, China National Knowledge Infrastructure, Wanfang, medRxiv (preprints), and Open Science Framework Preprints (preprint server aggregator) were searched to August 30, 2021. Eligible studies included mental health symptom change data by sex or gender. 12 studies (10 unique cohorts) were included, all of which reported dichotomized sex or gender data. 9 cohorts reported results from March to June 2020, and 2 of these also reported on September or November to December 2020. One cohort included data pre-November 2020 data but did not provide dates. Continuous symptom change differences were not statistically significant for depression (standardized mean difference [SMD] = 0.12, 95% CI -0.09-0.33; 4 studies, 4,475 participants; I2 = 69.0%) and stress (SMD = - 0.10, 95% CI -0.21-0.01; 4 studies, 1,533 participants; I2 = 0.0%), but anxiety (SMD = 0.15, 95% CI 0.07-0.22; 4 studies, 4,344 participants; I2 = 3.0%) and general mental health (SMD = 0.15, 95% CI 0.12-0.18; 3 studies, 15,692 participants; I2 = 0.0%) worsened more among females/women than males/men. There were no significant differences in changes in proportions above cut-offs: anxiety (difference = - 0.05, 95% CI - 0.20-0.11; 1 study, 217 participants), depression (difference = 0.12, 95% CI -0.03-0.28; 1 study, 217 participants), general mental health (difference = - 0.03, 95% CI - 0.09-0.04; 3 studies, 18,985 participants; I2 = 94.0%), stress (difference = 0.04, 95% CI - 0.10-0.17; 1 study, 217 participants). Mental health outcomes did not differ or were worse by small amounts among women than men during early COVID-19.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35794116 PMCID: PMC9258011 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-14746-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Characteristics of included studies (N = 12).
| First author | Outcome domains | Description of study design and participants | Country | Pre- and post-COVID-19 dates of data collection | Mean (SD) participant age or age range (%) | Use of sex or gender | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anxiety symptoms | Depression symptoms | General mental health | Stress | |||||||
| Dong57 | SCL-90-R | First-year undergraduate students from a single university recruited online who completed two assessments (one prior to COVID-19 and one during) | China | 09/2019 pre-11/2020a | F/W: 3162–3,277 (75.5–77.4) M/M: 923–1064 (22.6–24.5) | 19 (1) | Gender | |||
| Lim60 | PROMIS Anxiety | PROMIS Depression | PSS | Patients with systemic lupus erythematosus from the Georgians Organized Against Lupus cohort who complete annual surveys | United States | NR/2018–2019 03–04/2020 | F/W: 295 (93.4) M/M: 21 (6.6) | 47 (13) | Sex | |
| Magson56 | SCAS-C | SMFQ-C | Adolescents aged 13–16 years who complete annual assessments as part of an ongoing longitudinal cohort that began 4 years prior | Australia | NR/2019 05/2020 | Girls: 126 (50.8) Boys: 122 (49.2) | 14 (1) | Inconsistent | ||
| Megías-Robles53 | PANAS-NA | Community sample aged 19–67 years who completed two assessments (one prior to COVID-19 and one during) | Spain | 11/2019 04/2020 | F/W: 67 (65.7) M/M: 35 (34.3) | 30 (13) | Gender | |||
Pierce49 Daly50 | GHQ-12 | National probability-based sample of adults aged ≥ 18 years who are part of the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Study; an ongoing longitudinal study which has been collecting data continuously since 2009 | United Kingdom | Pre-COVID-19 wavesb | F/W: 7181c (46.7) M/M: 8195c (53.3) | 18–34 (11.5)d 35–49 (22.4)d 50–64 (34.5)d 65 + (31.6)d | Gender Inconsistent | |||
| 04–09/2020 | F/W: 6380 (58.4) M/M: 4538 (41.6) | |||||||||
| Rimfeld54 | GAD-7 | SMFQ | Adult twins born between 1994–1996 who, at age 18 months, were enrolled in the Twins Early Development Study; a longitudinal study which has collected over 14 waves of assessment in 20 years of data collection | United Kingdom | NR/2018 04–05/2020 | F/W: 2513–2578e (69.8–70.5) M/M: 1050–1116e (29.5–30.2) | 24–26 (100.0) | Inconsistent | ||
| Saraswathi58 | DASS-21 Anxiety | DASS-21 Depression | DASS-21 Stress | Convenience sample of undergraduate university medical students who completed two assessments (one prior to COVID-19 and one during) | India | 12/2019 06/2020 | F/W: 139 (64.1) M/M: 78 (35.9) | 20 (2) | Inconsistent | |
| Savage59 | WEMWBS | PSS | Undergraduate students from a single university recruited by email invitation and completed three or more assessments as part of the Student Health Study, a longitudinal cohort study | United Kingdom | 10/2019 04/2020 | F/W: 154 (72.0) M/M: 60 (28.0) | 18–21 (64.5) 22–25 (22.0) 26–35 (7.5) 35 + (6.1) | Inconsistent | ||
| Shanahan55 | PSS | Young adults who completed 9 assessments since 2004 as part of the Zurich Project on the Social Development from Childhood to Adulthood, a longitudinal cohort study | Switzerland | NR/2018 04/2020 | F/W: 378 (48.1) M/M: 408 (51.9) | 22 (0) | Sex | |||
van der Velden51 van der Velden52 | MHI-5 | National probability-based sample of adults aged ≥ 18 years who were enrolled and completed assessments for the Longitudinal Internet Studies for the Social Sciences since 2007 | The Netherlands | 03/2019 11–12/2019 03/2020 11–12/2020 | F/W: 2020 (50.7) M/M: 1963 (49.3) F/W: 2062 (50.7) M/M: 2002 (49.3) | 18–34 (24.9)f 35–49 (22.9)f 50–64 (26.1)f 65 + (26.1)f | Gender Sex | |||
DASS-21 Anxiety = Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale—Anxiety subscale; DASS-21 Depression = Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale—Depression subscale; DASS-21 Stress = Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale—Stress subscale, GAD-7 Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7; GHQ-12 = General Health Questionnaire-12; MHI-5 = Mental Health Index-5; PANAS-NA = Positive and Negative Affect Schedule—Negative affect subscale; PROMIS Anxiety = Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System—Anxiety subscale; PROMIS Depression = Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System—Depression subscale; PSS = Perceived Stress Scale; SCAS-C = Spence Children's Anxiety Scale—Child; SCL-90-R = Symptom Check List-90 Revised; SMFQ = Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire; SMFQ-C = Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire—Child Version; WEMWBS = Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale.
aAuthors did not provide dates of data collection. The article was identified in a November 9, 2020 search. bAnalyses compared COVID-19 symptom levels to preceding trends across multiple assessments. cNumber included in fixed effects regression analysis from where the majority of data were extracted. dAge groups reported for Daly48; for Pierce,49 16–24 = 8.8%, 25–34 = 11.2%, 35–44 = 16.0%, 45–54 = 20.1%, 55–69 = 28.9%, 70 + = 15.1%. eNumber of participants differed by outcome. fBased on van der Velden.51.
Outcomes from included studies by sex or gender.
| First author | Pre- and post-COVID-19 data collection | Sex or gender | Continuous outcome measure | Pre-COVID-19 mean (SD) | Post-COVID-19 mean (SD) | Mean (SD) change | Hedges’ g standardized mean difference (95% CI) | Dichotomous outcome measure | % Pre-COVID-19 (95% CI) | % Post-COVID-19 (95% CI) | % Change (95%CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lim60 | NR/2018–2019 03–04/2020 | Females/Women | 295 | PROMIS Anxiety | 50.20 (11.50) | 50.40 (11.10) | 0.20 (10.10) | 0.02 (− 0.14, 0.18) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 21 | 50.50 (9.90) | 48.60 (11.00) | − 1.90 (12.10) | − 0.17 (− 0.80, 0.45) | ||||||||
| Magson56 | NR/2019 05/2020 | Females/Women | 126 | SCAS-C | 5.55 (4.05) | 6.52 (4.31) | 0.97 (4.18) | 0.23 (− 0.02, 0.48) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 122 | 3.63 (3.13) | 3.64 (3.16) | 0.01 (3.15) | 0.00 (− 0.25, 0.26) | ||||||||
| Rimfeld54 | NR/2018 04–05/2020 | Females/Women | 2,513 | GAD-7 | 8.15 (7.53) | 9.69 (7.69) | 1.54 (7.61) | 0.20 (0.15, 0.26) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 1,050 | 5.88 (6.66) | 6.30 (6.58) | 0.42 (6.62) | 0.06 (− 0.02, 0.15) | ||||||||
| Saraswathi58 | 12/2019 06/2020 | Females/Women | 139 | DASS-21 Anxiety | 4.59 (6.29) | 5.94 (6.93) | 1.35 (6.62) | 0.20 (− 0.03, 0.44) | DASS-21 Anxiety > 7 | 18.7 (13.1, 26.0) | 32.4 (25.2, 40.5) | 13.7 (4.4, 22.7) | |
| Males/Men | 78 | 4.62 (6.04) | 6.41 (7.50) | 1.79 (6.81) | 0.26 (− 0.06, 0.58) | 25.6 (17.3, 36.3) | 34.6 (25.0, 45.7) | 9.0 (-4.0, 21.5) | |||||
| Lim60 | NR/2018–2019 03–04/2020 | Females/Women | 295 | PROMIS Depression | 50.80 (10.70) | 49.30 (9.80) | − 1.50 (9.30) | − 0.15 (− 0.31, 0.02) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 21 | 50.70 (8.60) | 49.90 (9.70) | − 0.80 (8.20) | − 0.08 (− 0.70, 0.54) | ||||||||
| Magson56 | NR/2019 05/2020 | Females/Women | 126 | SMFQ-C | 4.77 (5.00) | 8.16 (6.46) | 3.39 (5.78) | 0.58 (0.33, 0.84) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 122 | 2.81 (3.18) | 4.02 (4.76) | 1.21 (4.05) | 0.30 (0.04, 0.55) | ||||||||
| Rimfeld54 | NR/2018 04–05/2020 | Females/Women | 2,578 | SMFQ | 4.65 (4.20) | 4.81 (4.07) | 0.16 (4.14) | 0.04 (− 0.02, 0.09) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 1,116 | 3.71 (3.70) | 3.33 (3.40) | − 0.38 (3.55) | − 0.11 (− 0.19, − 0.02) | ||||||||
| Saraswathi58 | 12/2019 06/2020 | Females/Women | 139 | DASS-21 Depression | 7.71 (7.57) | 7.94 (8.77) | 0.23 (8.19) | 0.03 (− 0.21, 0.26) | DASS-21 Depression > 9 | 36.7 (29.1, 45.0) | 34.5 (27.1, 42.8) | -2.2 (-11.7, 7.4) | |
| Males/Men | 78 | 7.28 (8.40) | 8.54 (9.17) | 1.26 (8.79) | 0.14 (− 0.17, 0.45) | 26.9 (18.3, 37.7) | 37.2 (27.3, 48.3) | 10.3 (-2.9, 22.9) | |||||
| Dong57 | 09/2019 NR/2020 | Females/Women | 3,162–3,277 | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | SCL-90-R ≥ 160 | 19.7 (18.4, 21.1) | 27.9 (26.4, 29.5) | 8.2 (6.3, 10.0) | |
| Males/Men | 923–1,064 | 14.3 (12.3, 16.5) | 21.2 (18.7, 24.0) | 6.9 (4.0, 9.9) | |||||||||
| Megías-Robles53 | 11/2019 04/2020 | Females/Women | 67 | PANAS-NA | 1.93 (0.65) | 2.28 (0.79) | 0.34 (0.86) | 0.46 (0.12, 0.81) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 35 | 1.88 (0.67) | 2.11 (0.66) | 0.23 (0.66) | 0.34 (− 0.14, 0.82) | ||||||||
Pierce49 Daly50 | Pre-COVID-19 Waves 04/2020 09/2020 | Females/Women | 7,18122,b 6,380 | GHQ-12 | 12.00 (5.91) | 13.60 (7.14) | 1.60 (6.55)c 0.88 (NR)d | 0.24 (0.21, 0.28) 0.13 (0.10, 0.17) | GHQ-12 ≥ 4 | 24.5 (22.5, 26.4)e 24.5 (22.5, 26.4)e | 36.8 (34.8, 38.9)e 25.0 (23.3, 26.8)e | 12.4 (9.9, 14.9)e 0.5 (− 1.8, 2.9)e | |
| Males/Men | 8,19522,b 4,538 | 10.80 (4.99) | 11.50 (5.75) | 0.70 (5.38)c 0.03 (NR)d | 0.13 (0.10, 0.16) 0.01 (− 0.03, 0.04) | 16.7 (14.6, 18.7)e 16.7 (14.6, 18.7)e | 21.1 (19.0, 23.3)e 16.0 (14.0, 17.9)e | 4.5 (2.0, 7.0)e − 0.7 (− 2.9, 1.5)e | |||||
| Savage59 | 10/2019 04/2020 | Females/Women | 154 | WEMWBSf | 43.00 (9.00) | 40.00 (10.00) | − 3.00 (9.51) | 0.31 (0.09, 0.54) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 60 | 47.00 (9.00) | 44.00 (10.00) | − 3.00 (9.51) | 0.31 (− 0.05, 0.67) | ||||||||
van der Velden51 van der Velden52 | 03/2019 11–12/2019 03/2020 11–12/2020 | Females/Women | 2,020 2,062 | –– | –– | –– | –– | –– | MHI-5 ≤ 59 | 18.9 (17.3, 20.7) 19.1 (17.4, 20.8) | 18.3 (16.7, 20.1) 17.8 (16.2, 19.5) | − 0.6 (− 2.5, 1.3) − 1.3 (− 3.1, 0.6) | |
| Males/Mmen | 1,962–1,963 2,002 | 14.6 (13.1, 16.3) 14.7 (13.2, 16.3) | 15.6 (14.1, 17.3) 15.9 (14.4, 17.6) | 1.0 (− 0.8, 2.7) 1.2 (− 0.5, 3.0) | |||||||||
| Lim60 | NR/2018-2019 03-04/2020 | Females/Women | 295 | PSS | 17.50 (8.00) | 16.40 (8.20) | − 1.10 (6.60) | − 0.14 (− 0.30, 0.03) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 21 | 17.70 (6.60) | 18.10 (6.80) | 0.40 (8.00) | 0.06 (− 0.56, 0.68) | ||||||||
| Saraswathi58 | 12/2019 06/2020 | Females/Women | 139 | DASS-21 Stress | 6.95 (7.22) | 8.88 (7.99) | 1.93 (7.61) | 0.25 (0.02, 0.49) | DASS-21 Stress > 14 | 19.4 (13.7, 26.8) | 22.3 (16.2, 29.9) | 2.9 (− 4.9, 10.6) | |
| Males/Men | 78 | 7.95 (7.54) | 10.08 (8.50) | 2.13 (8.03) | 0.26 (− 0.05, 0.58) | 23.1 (15.1, 33.6) | 29.5 (20.5, 40.4) | 6.4 (− 5.6, 18.2) | |||||
| Savage59 | 10/2019 04/2020 | Females/Women | 154 | PSS | 21.00 (7.00) | 24.00 (7.00) | 3.00 (7.00) | 0.43 (0.20, 0.65) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 60 | 17.00 (6.00) | 21.00 (7.00) | 4.00 (6.52) | 0.61 (0.24, 0.97) | ||||||||
| Shanahan55 | NR/2018 04/2020 | Females/Women | 378 | PSS | 3.02 (0.98) | 3.10 (0.94) | 0.08 (0.96) | 0.08 (− 0.06, 0.23) | –– | –– | –– | –– | |
| Males/Men | 408 | 2.57 (0.86) | 2.74 (0.86) | 0.17 (0.86) | 0.20 (0.06, 0.34) | ||||||||
DASS-21 Anxiety = Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale—Anxiety subscale; DASS-21 Depression = Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale—Depression subscale; DASS-21 Stress = Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale—Stress subscale; GAD-7 = Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7; GHQ-12 = General Health Questionnaire-12; MHI-5 = Mental Health Index-5; PANAS-NA = Positive and Negative Affect Schedule—Negative affect subscale; PROMIS Anxiety = Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System—Anxiety subscale; PROMIS Depression = Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System—Depression subscale; PSS = Perceived Stress Scale; SCAS-C = Spence Children's Anxiety Scale—Child; SCL-90-R = Symptom Check List-90 Revised; SMFQ = Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire; SMFQ-C = Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire—Child Version; WEMWBS = Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale.
aPositive Hedge’s g sizes and increases in proportions above a threshold indicate worse mental health in COVID-19 compared to pre-COVID-19. Effects for measures where high scores = positive outcomes were reversed to reflect this. b Number included in fixed effects regression analysis from where majority of data were extracted. cBased on difference between 2020 and 2019 outcomes. dBased on estimate from fixed effects regression model that estimates within-person change accounting for pre-COVID-19 trends.eIncluded proportion outcomes from Daly50 since they reported for two time points. f Higher scale scores reflect better mental health; thus, direction of effect sizes reversed.
Figure 1Forest plots of standardized mean difference of the difference in change in continuous anxiety symptom scores (a), depression symptom scores (b), general mental health scores (c), and stress scores (d) between females or women and males or men. Positive numbers indicate greater negative change in mental health in females or women compared to males or men.
Figure 2Forest plots of standardized mean difference of the difference in change in proportion above a cut-off for anxiety (a), depression (b), general mental health (c), and stress (d) between females or women and males or men. Positive numbers indicate greater negative change in mental health in females or women compared to males or men. (c) reflects dichotomous COVID-19 mental health measured in early 2020, whereas (e) reflects measurements from late 2020 for Daly[50] and van der Velden[52].
Figure 3Illustration of the magnitude of change for SMD = 0.15 assuming a normal distribution. The hypothetical blue distribution represents pre-COVID-19 scores, and the grey distribution represents post-COVID-19 scores with a mean symptom increase of SMD = 0.15.