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Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network

AIMS: COVID-19 has long-term impacts on public mental health, while few research studies incorporate multidimensional methods to thoroughly characterise the psychological profile of general population and little detailed guidance exists for mental health management during the pandemic. This research...

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Autores principales: Lu, Zheng-An, Shi, Le, Que, Jian-Yu, Zheng, Yong-Bo, Wang, Qian-Wen, Liu, Wei-Jian, Huang, Yue-Tong, Shi, Jie, Bao, Yan-Ping, Lu, Lin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9531590/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36165185
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796022000518
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author Lu, Zheng-An
Shi, Le
Que, Jian-Yu
Zheng, Yong-Bo
Wang, Qian-Wen
Liu, Wei-Jian
Huang, Yue-Tong
Shi, Jie
Bao, Yan-Ping
Lu, Lin
author_facet Lu, Zheng-An
Shi, Le
Que, Jian-Yu
Zheng, Yong-Bo
Wang, Qian-Wen
Liu, Wei-Jian
Huang, Yue-Tong
Shi, Jie
Bao, Yan-Ping
Lu, Lin
author_sort Lu, Zheng-An
collection PubMed
description AIMS: COVID-19 has long-term impacts on public mental health, while few research studies incorporate multidimensional methods to thoroughly characterise the psychological profile of general population and little detailed guidance exists for mental health management during the pandemic. This research aims to capture long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 by integrating trajectory modelling approaches, latent trajectory pattern identification and network analyses. METHODS: Longitudinal data were collected from a nationwide sample of 18 804 adults in 12 months after COVID-19 outbreak in China. Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 and Insomnia Severity Index were used to measure depression, anxiety and insomnia, respectively. The unconditional and conditional latent growth curve models were fitted to investigate trajectories and long-term predictors for psychological symptoms. We employed latent growth mixture model to identify the major psychological symptom trajectory patterns, and ran sparse Gaussian graphical models with graphical lasso to explore the evolution of psychopathological network. RESULTS: At 12 months after COVID-19 outbreak, psychological symptoms generally alleviated, and five psychological symptom trajectories with different demographics were identified: normal stable (63.4%), mild stable (15.3%), mild-increase to decrease (11.7%), mild-decrease to increase (4.0%) and moderate/severe stable (5.5%). The finding indicated that there were still about 5% individuals showing consistently severe distress and approximately 16% following fluctuating psychological trajectories, who should be continuously monitored. For individuals with persistently severe trajectories and those with fluctuating trajectories, central or bridge symptoms in the network were mainly ‘motor abnormality’ and ‘sad mood’, respectively. Compared with initial peak and late COVID-19 phase, aftermath of initial peak might be a psychologically vulnerable period with highest network connectivity. The central and bridge symptoms for aftermath of initial peak (‘appetite change’ and ‘trouble of relaxing’) were totally different from those at other pandemic phases (‘sad mood’). CONCLUSIONS: This research identified the overall growing trend, long-term predictors, trajectory classes and evolutionary pattern of psychopathological network of psychological symptoms in 12 months after COVID-19 outbreak. It provides a multidimensional long-term psychological profile of the general population after COVID-19 outbreak, and accentuates the essentiality of continuous psychological monitoring, as well as population- and time-specific psychological management after COVID-19. We believe our findings can offer reference for long-term psychological management after pandemics.
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spelling pubmed-95315902022-10-17 Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network Lu, Zheng-An Shi, Le Que, Jian-Yu Zheng, Yong-Bo Wang, Qian-Wen Liu, Wei-Jian Huang, Yue-Tong Shi, Jie Bao, Yan-Ping Lu, Lin Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci Original Article AIMS: COVID-19 has long-term impacts on public mental health, while few research studies incorporate multidimensional methods to thoroughly characterise the psychological profile of general population and little detailed guidance exists for mental health management during the pandemic. This research aims to capture long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 by integrating trajectory modelling approaches, latent trajectory pattern identification and network analyses. METHODS: Longitudinal data were collected from a nationwide sample of 18 804 adults in 12 months after COVID-19 outbreak in China. Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Generalised Anxiety Disorder-7 and Insomnia Severity Index were used to measure depression, anxiety and insomnia, respectively. The unconditional and conditional latent growth curve models were fitted to investigate trajectories and long-term predictors for psychological symptoms. We employed latent growth mixture model to identify the major psychological symptom trajectory patterns, and ran sparse Gaussian graphical models with graphical lasso to explore the evolution of psychopathological network. RESULTS: At 12 months after COVID-19 outbreak, psychological symptoms generally alleviated, and five psychological symptom trajectories with different demographics were identified: normal stable (63.4%), mild stable (15.3%), mild-increase to decrease (11.7%), mild-decrease to increase (4.0%) and moderate/severe stable (5.5%). The finding indicated that there were still about 5% individuals showing consistently severe distress and approximately 16% following fluctuating psychological trajectories, who should be continuously monitored. For individuals with persistently severe trajectories and those with fluctuating trajectories, central or bridge symptoms in the network were mainly ‘motor abnormality’ and ‘sad mood’, respectively. Compared with initial peak and late COVID-19 phase, aftermath of initial peak might be a psychologically vulnerable period with highest network connectivity. The central and bridge symptoms for aftermath of initial peak (‘appetite change’ and ‘trouble of relaxing’) were totally different from those at other pandemic phases (‘sad mood’). CONCLUSIONS: This research identified the overall growing trend, long-term predictors, trajectory classes and evolutionary pattern of psychopathological network of psychological symptoms in 12 months after COVID-19 outbreak. It provides a multidimensional long-term psychological profile of the general population after COVID-19 outbreak, and accentuates the essentiality of continuous psychological monitoring, as well as population- and time-specific psychological management after COVID-19. We believe our findings can offer reference for long-term psychological management after pandemics. Cambridge University Press 2022-09-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9531590/ /pubmed/36165185 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796022000518 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Lu, Zheng-An
Shi, Le
Que, Jian-Yu
Zheng, Yong-Bo
Wang, Qian-Wen
Liu, Wei-Jian
Huang, Yue-Tong
Shi, Jie
Bao, Yan-Ping
Lu, Lin
Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
title Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
title_full Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
title_fullStr Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
title_full_unstemmed Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
title_short Long-term psychological profile of general population following COVID-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
title_sort long-term psychological profile of general population following covid-19 outbreak: symptom trajectories and evolution of psychopathological network
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9531590/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36165185
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796022000518
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