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| Version | Summary | Created by | Modification | Content Size | Created at | Operation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Nereida Bueno-Guerra | + 4520 word(s) | 4520 | 2022-01-06 01:31:11 | | | |
| 2 | Yvaine Wei | -1423 word(s) | 3097 | 2022-01-07 09:46:10 | | | | |
| 3 | Vicky Zhou | -2500 word(s) | 597 | 2022-04-13 12:19:23 | | |
The worldwide mental health burden associated to COVID-19. The psychological symptoms associated to COVID-19 can originate from three different sources: lockdowns, pandemic life and virus infection (both COVID-19 and post COVID-19 condition). Within the psychological symptoms it can be found: anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress, fatigue and cognitive impairment (i.e., ’brain fog’, mental slowness, deficits in attention, executive functioning, working memory, learning, articulation, and/or psychomotor coordination). Plus, two psychological conditions associated to the COVID-19 pandemic have been coined so far by the World Health Organization: pandemic fatigue and post COVID-19 condition. The increase of psychological symptoms both in the general population and in frontline workers (especially health-care workers) generates an unprecedented number of psychological patients and it challenges national mental health systems.
| Lockdowns | Pandemic Life | COVID-19 Infection |
|---|---|---|
| Not alarmingly affected global population but suicide vigilance is recommended | Global increase in the rates of anxiety, depression and post-traumatic disorders | COVID-19 infection: cognitive impairment and fatigue |
| Vulnerable subgroups: autism, pregnancy, homeless | Vulnerable subgroups: OCD, depression | Post COVID-19 condition (3 months after infection): cognitive impairment and fatigue over 2 months |
| Risk contexts: domestic violence, intrafamilial child abuse | Front-line workers more exposed, especially health-care workers | Post-intensive care syndrome in intensive care unit survivors: cognitive impairment and mental health problems |
| Pandemic fatigue: demotivation to follow preventive measures | Abundance of cross-sectional rather than longitudinal and prospective studies, preventing causal knowledge | Both patients and their relatives (current carers) may be at risk of psychological impact |