COVID-19 Fear, Food Insecurity May Worsen Depressive Symptoms, Survey Finds

The COVID-19 pandemic has created significant fear and stress for people around the world. Areport inDepression& Anxietynow describes how COVID-19-related fear and food insecurity are likely contributing to higher levels of depression in U.S. adults.“Early reports coming out of China, Europe, and North America confirm significant mental health consequences tied to heightened levels of fear, perceived health risks, and an overwhelming sense of dread that [are] tied to dramatic increases in virus‐related morbidity and mortality around the wor ld,” wrote Kevin M. Fitzpatrick, Ph.D., of the University of Arkansas and colleagues.The report by Fitzpatrick and colleagues focused on the responses of thousands of U.S. adults to an online survey in late March. The survey included questions about the respondents ’ depressive symptoms (based on the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, or CES‐D), fear of COVID-19 (on a scale of 0-10), access to healthy food, and physical symptoms. The respondents were also asked questions about their employment status, how connected they felt to others in their social network, the extent to which they felt in control of factors impacting their lives, and more.Of the nearly 10,368 adults surveyed (average age 47 years), 19% reported they were unemployed, laid off, or furloughed. The authors noted that a CES-D score of 16 is considered the cutoff for depression; the average CES ‐D score of the respondents was 16.9, and 28% of...
Source: Psychiatr News - Category: Psychiatry Tags: Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale COVID-19 & Anxiety food insecurity Kevin Fitzpatrick survey Source Type: research