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Changes in the prevalence of mental health problems during the first year of the pandemic: a systematic review and dose-response meta-analysis

Authors :
Toshi A Furukawa
Edoardo G Ostinelli
Andrea Cipriani
Pim Cuijpers
Lin Ma
Akira Onishi
Tianjing Li
Georgia Salanti
Vikram Patel
Christian Kieling
Sanae Kishimoto
Ronald C Kessler
Seena Fazel
Marialena Trivella
Akira Sato
Yikang Zhu
Raman Sharma
Matthias Egger
Simone N. Vigod
Yu-Kang Tu
Tou-Yuan Tsai
Yuan-Pang Wang
Irene Bighelli
Alessandro Rodolico
Stefan Leucht
Michael Ostacher
Ian White
Virginia Chiocchia
Ethan Sahker
Rie Toyomoto
Kazufumi Yoshida
Trevor Thompson
Dongfang Wang
Jing Tian
Katharine A Smith
Gonzalo Arrondo
Meenakshi Sharma
Silviya Ralovska
Andreas D Haas
Michael A Wewege
Bartosz Helfer
Erika Kalocsanyiova
Harrison Nelson
Gandy Dolores-Maldonado
Caroline Zangani
Kenji Omae
Shimeng Dong
Shino Kikuchi
Thomy Tonia
James S W Hong
Natalie Luise Peter
Letao Sun
Aurélie M Lasserre
Alexander Holloway
Leila Darwish
Andrea Zucchetti
Amin Sharifan
Ana Cristina Solis
Antonio Vita
Carmen Concerto
Chinonso Igwesi-Chidobe
Carlos Rios-Gonzalez
Anna Ceraso
Daniel Prates Baldez
Dicle Dilay Demir
Ying-Chun Lin
Elena Invernizzi
Gabriel Henrique Beraldi
Gamze Erzin
Giulia Ottaviano
Graciela J Balbin-Ramón
Chin-Yen Ho
Helio Elkis
Yun Chen Liu
Javier Ballesteros
Johanna Schneckenburger
Jessie Jingxia Lin
Abdulkadir Usman Sambo
Lena Feber
Mattia Marchetti
Mauro Italia
Mengchang Qin
Yi-Chih Lin
Nurul Husna Salahuddin
Rossella Virgillito
Ogulcan Ciray
Sergio A Covarrubias-Castillo
Yun Hsia
Shiue-Shiuan Tu
Vidya Giri Shankar
Source :
BMJ Mental Health, Vol 27, Iss 1 (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group, 2024.

Abstract

Aim To describe the pattern of the prevalence of mental health problems during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic and examine the impact of containment measures on these trends.Methods We identified articles published until 30 August 2021 that reported the prevalence of mental health problems in the general population at two or more time points. A crowd of 114 reviewers extracted data on prevalence, study and participant characteristics. We collected information on the number of days since the first SARS-CoV-2 infection in the study country, the stringency of containment measures and the number of cases and deaths. We synthesised changes in prevalence during the pandemic using a random-effects model. We used dose-response meta-analysis to evaluate the trajectory of the changes in mental health problems.Results We included 41 studies for 7 mental health conditions. The average odds of symptoms increased during the pandemic (mean OR ranging from 1.23 to 2.08). Heterogeneity was very large and could not be explained by differences in participants or study characteristics. Average odds of psychological distress, depression and anxiety increased during the first 2 months of the pandemic, with increased stringency of the measures, reported infections and deaths. The confidence in the evidence was low to very low.Conclusions We observed an initial increase in the average risk of psychological distress, depression-related and anxiety-related problems during the first 2 months of the pandemic. However, large heterogeneity suggests that different populations had different responses to the challenges imposed by the pandemic.

Subjects

Subjects :
Psychiatry
RC435-571

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
27559734
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
BMJ Mental Health
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.7c865ac5b5544c68b6da64e797d48ddd
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjment-2024-301018