Cargando…

Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study

INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 pandemic has had a greater psychological impact on patients with chronic ailments such as diabetes mellitus, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS compared to those without chronic conditions. We explored the psychological impacts of COVID-19 among people living with diabetes mellitus in...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ephraim, Richard Kobina Dadzie, Duah, Evans, Nkansah, Charles, Amoah, Samuel, Fosu, Emmanuel, Afrifa, Justice, Botchway, Felix, Okyere, Perditer, Essien-Baidoo, Samuel, Mensah, Kofi, Serwaa, Dorcas, Sakyi, Samuel Asamoah, Adoba, Prince, Fondjo, Linda Ahenkorah, Ninnoni, Jerry Paul, Aderoju, Yaa Boahemaa Gyasi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The African Field Epidemiology Network 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8590261/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34804343
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2021.40.76.26834
_version_ 1784598919481655296
author Ephraim, Richard Kobina Dadzie
Duah, Evans
Nkansah, Charles
Amoah, Samuel
Fosu, Emmanuel
Afrifa, Justice
Botchway, Felix
Okyere, Perditer
Essien-Baidoo, Samuel
Mensah, Kofi
Serwaa, Dorcas
Sakyi, Samuel Asamoah
Adoba, Prince
Fondjo, Linda Ahenkorah
Ninnoni, Jerry Paul
Aderoju, Yaa Boahemaa Gyasi
author_facet Ephraim, Richard Kobina Dadzie
Duah, Evans
Nkansah, Charles
Amoah, Samuel
Fosu, Emmanuel
Afrifa, Justice
Botchway, Felix
Okyere, Perditer
Essien-Baidoo, Samuel
Mensah, Kofi
Serwaa, Dorcas
Sakyi, Samuel Asamoah
Adoba, Prince
Fondjo, Linda Ahenkorah
Ninnoni, Jerry Paul
Aderoju, Yaa Boahemaa Gyasi
author_sort Ephraim, Richard Kobina Dadzie
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 pandemic has had a greater psychological impact on patients with chronic ailments such as diabetes mellitus, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS compared to those without chronic conditions. We explored the psychological impacts of COVID-19 among people living with diabetes mellitus in Ghana. METHODS: this study employed a hospital-based cross-sectional design involving 157 diabetes mellitus patients aged 20 years and above. We assessed diabetes distress by the seventeen-item diabetes stress (DDS17) scale and COVID-19 worries by 3 specific benchmarks: “worry about overly affected due to diabetes if infected with COVID-19”, “worry about people with diabetes characterized as a risk group” and “worry about not able to manage diabetes if infected with COVID-19”. A close-ended questionnaire was used in data collection. RESULTS: of 157 diabetic patients interviewed, the majority had type 2 diabetes mellitus with known complications and only 42.7% were managing COVID-19 symptoms. The participants showed moderate to high level of COVID-19 specific worry, moderate fear of isolation, and low level of diabetes-associated distress. About 33.8% of the study population expressed a sense of worry towards the pandemic. The logistic regression showed that age, employment status, and presence of other chronic diseases were significantly associated with worries about being overly affected if infected with COVID-19 due to their diabetes status. Age and sex were associated with worries about people with diabetes being characterized as a risk group and age, sex and employment status were associated with participants who were worried about not being able to manage diabetes if infected with COVID-19. CONCLUSION: the general trend indicates a sense of worry among diabetes patients during the COVID-19 pandemic which is associated with poorer psychological health. Clients' education and counseling on COVID-19 are necessary to address some of their concerns to minimize the level of anxiety and emotional stress in these individuals.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8590261
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2021
publisher The African Field Epidemiology Network
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-85902612021-11-18 Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study Ephraim, Richard Kobina Dadzie Duah, Evans Nkansah, Charles Amoah, Samuel Fosu, Emmanuel Afrifa, Justice Botchway, Felix Okyere, Perditer Essien-Baidoo, Samuel Mensah, Kofi Serwaa, Dorcas Sakyi, Samuel Asamoah Adoba, Prince Fondjo, Linda Ahenkorah Ninnoni, Jerry Paul Aderoju, Yaa Boahemaa Gyasi Pan Afr Med J Research INTRODUCTION: COVID-19 pandemic has had a greater psychological impact on patients with chronic ailments such as diabetes mellitus, tuberculosis, and HIV/AIDS compared to those without chronic conditions. We explored the psychological impacts of COVID-19 among people living with diabetes mellitus in Ghana. METHODS: this study employed a hospital-based cross-sectional design involving 157 diabetes mellitus patients aged 20 years and above. We assessed diabetes distress by the seventeen-item diabetes stress (DDS17) scale and COVID-19 worries by 3 specific benchmarks: “worry about overly affected due to diabetes if infected with COVID-19”, “worry about people with diabetes characterized as a risk group” and “worry about not able to manage diabetes if infected with COVID-19”. A close-ended questionnaire was used in data collection. RESULTS: of 157 diabetic patients interviewed, the majority had type 2 diabetes mellitus with known complications and only 42.7% were managing COVID-19 symptoms. The participants showed moderate to high level of COVID-19 specific worry, moderate fear of isolation, and low level of diabetes-associated distress. About 33.8% of the study population expressed a sense of worry towards the pandemic. The logistic regression showed that age, employment status, and presence of other chronic diseases were significantly associated with worries about being overly affected if infected with COVID-19 due to their diabetes status. Age and sex were associated with worries about people with diabetes being characterized as a risk group and age, sex and employment status were associated with participants who were worried about not being able to manage diabetes if infected with COVID-19. CONCLUSION: the general trend indicates a sense of worry among diabetes patients during the COVID-19 pandemic which is associated with poorer psychological health. Clients' education and counseling on COVID-19 are necessary to address some of their concerns to minimize the level of anxiety and emotional stress in these individuals. The African Field Epidemiology Network 2021-10-05 /pmc/articles/PMC8590261/ /pubmed/34804343 http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2021.40.76.26834 Text en Copyright: Richard Kobina Dadzie Ephraim et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/The Pan African Medical Journal (ISSN: 1937-8688). This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution International 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Ephraim, Richard Kobina Dadzie
Duah, Evans
Nkansah, Charles
Amoah, Samuel
Fosu, Emmanuel
Afrifa, Justice
Botchway, Felix
Okyere, Perditer
Essien-Baidoo, Samuel
Mensah, Kofi
Serwaa, Dorcas
Sakyi, Samuel Asamoah
Adoba, Prince
Fondjo, Linda Ahenkorah
Ninnoni, Jerry Paul
Aderoju, Yaa Boahemaa Gyasi
Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study
title Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study
title_full Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study
title_short Psychological impact of COVID-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in Cape Coast, Ghana: a cross-sectional study
title_sort psychological impact of covid-19 on diabetes mellitus patients in cape coast, ghana: a cross-sectional study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8590261/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34804343
http://dx.doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2021.40.76.26834
work_keys_str_mv AT ephraimrichardkobinadadzie psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT duahevans psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT nkansahcharles psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT amoahsamuel psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT fosuemmanuel psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT afrifajustice psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT botchwayfelix psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT okyereperditer psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT essienbaidoosamuel psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT mensahkofi psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT serwaadorcas psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT sakyisamuelasamoah psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT adobaprince psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT fondjolindaahenkorah psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT ninnonijerrypaul psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy
AT aderojuyaaboahemaagyasi psychologicalimpactofcovid19ondiabetesmellituspatientsincapecoastghanaacrosssectionalstudy