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Abstract
Background
The present study examines the impact of coronavirus-related restrictions on mental health among American adults, and how this relationship varies as a function of time and two measures of vulnerability (preexisting physical symptoms and job insecurity).
Methods
We draw on data from two waves of Corona Impact Survey, which were fielded in late April and early of May 2020. Multilevel models were used to analyze the hierarchically nested data.
Results
Experiencing coronavirus disease-2019 restrictions significantly raise mental distress. This association is stronger for individuals with preexisting health conditions and those who worry about job prospects. These findings hold with the inclusion of region-wave covariates (number of deaths, wave dummy and aggregate measure of restrictions). Finally, there is a cross-level interaction: the restriction-distress connection is more pronounced in the second wave of data.
Conclusions
Our research indicates that people who are more physically and/or financially vulnerable suffer more from the imposed restrictions, i.e. ‘social isolation’. The mental health impact of coronavirus pandemic is not constant but conditional on the level of vulnerability.
The present study examines the impact of coronavirus-related restrictions on mental health among American adults, and how this relationship varies as a function of time and two measures of vulnerability (preexisting physical symptoms and job insecurity).
Methods
We draw on data from two waves of Corona Impact Survey, which were fielded in late April and early of May 2020. Multilevel models were used to analyze the hierarchically nested data.
Results
Experiencing coronavirus disease-2019 restrictions significantly raise mental distress. This association is stronger for individuals with preexisting health conditions and those who worry about job prospects. These findings hold with the inclusion of region-wave covariates (number of deaths, wave dummy and aggregate measure of restrictions). Finally, there is a cross-level interaction: the restriction-distress connection is more pronounced in the second wave of data.
Conclusions
Our research indicates that people who are more physically and/or financially vulnerable suffer more from the imposed restrictions, i.e. ‘social isolation’. The mental health impact of coronavirus pandemic is not constant but conditional on the level of vulnerability.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Journal of Public Health |
Early online date | 3 Sept 2020 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 3 Sept 2020 |
Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms
- Cathie Marsh Institute
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'COVID-19 restrictions and mental distress among American adults: evidence from Corona Impact Survey (W1 and W2)'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Together and Apart: the Dynamics of Ethnic Diversity, Segregation and Social Cohesion among Young People and Adults
Laurence, J. (PI) & Shankley, W. (CoI)
4/10/19 → 31/08/21
Project: Research