Mental Health Impact of Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Individuals with Pre-Existing Mental Disorders: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Research
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection and Characteristics of Included Studies
Study ID | Diagnostic Groups | Country | Study Design | Setting Category | Diagnosis | Previous Treatment/Duration of Illness | Sample Size/n(%) Female/Age (M ± SD) | Assessments | Outcomes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Pre- to peri-pandemic changes of mental health | |||||||||
Castellini 2020 [68] | ED | Italy | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/NR | 74/74 (100%)/31.74 ± 12.76 | P1: January 2019–September 2019 P2: November 2019–January 2020 D1: 22 April 2020–3 May 2020 | Eating disorder specific psychopathology; general psychopathology; objective binge eating monthly |
Chakraborty 2020 [23] | OCD | India | L | Outpatient | NR; probably C | Yes/NR | 84/64 (76.2%)/NR | P1: NR (pre-pandemic scores; last recorded Y-BOCS severity score noted from the case register) D1: 23 April 2020–22 May 2020 | OCD severity |
Cordellieri 2021 [69] | SSOPD | Italy | L | Residential care | NR; probably C | Yes/NR (chronic, residential living) | 22/10 (45.5%)/31.82 ± 6.96 | P1: November 2019 D1: April 2020 | Psychiatric symptoms |
Giel 2021 [51] | ED | Germany | L | NR | C | Yes/duration of illness (from original IMPULS trial 3 years before): IG: 15.9 ± 11.4, CG: 15.5 ± 12.2 | 42 (52% of IMPULS trial sample)/34 (81%)/41.1 ± 12.6 (at baseline), 41.3 ± 12.6 (end of treatment), 45.5 ± 12.6 (COVID-19 follow-up) | P1: NR (entering IMPULS trial; IMPULS trial carried out between March 2015–September 2017) P2: NR (end of treatment/trial) D1: May 2020–July 2020 | Depressive symptoms; eating disorder specific psychopathology; general psychopathology |
Goldfarb 2022 [70] | ASD | Israel | L | Other | C | NR/NR | 23 (completed both surveys)/4 (17.4%)/30.22 ± 7.4 | P1: September 2019–January 2020 D1: April 2020–May 2020 | Psychological (emotional) distress |
Hamm 2020 [60] | DD | USA | L | Probably outpatient | C | Yes/38.6 years (age at survey M ± SD = 69.2 ± 6.0; age at onset 30.6 ± 18.8) | 73/50 (68.5%)/ 69.2 ± 6.0 | P1: ~April 2019 ± 9 months (anxiety symptoms), ~May 2019 ± 8 months (depressive symptoms) P2: ~December 2019 ± 5 months (depressive symptoms) D1: 1 April 2020–23 April 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms |
Johnco 2021 [63] | Mixed (anxiety and/or depressive disorder); no subgroup data reported | Australia | L | NR | C | Yes/on average 5.67 years post-treatment | 37/24 (65%)/75 ± 5 | P1: ~2009–2019 (1 to 129 (M = 68, SD = 43) months prior to COVID-19 lockdown) D1: April 2020–May 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; psychological distress; quality of life (psychological health, social relationships) |
Khosravani 2021 [53] | OCD | Iran | L | NR | C | Yes/age of OCD onset: 26.6 ± 8.55; illness duration: 9.6 ± 7.0 years | 270/155 (57.4%)/36 ± 12.1 | P1: NR (before outbreak of COVID-19) D1: May 2020–July 2020 | OCD severity |
Kott 2020 [71] | SSOPD | International/NR | R-CS | NR | NR | NR/NR | NR/NR/NR | P1: NR (before the date of the first confirmed COVID-19 case within each country) D1: NR (after the date of the first confirmed COVID-19 case within each country) | Anxiety, excitement, hallucinatory behavior |
Machado 2020 [72] | ED | Portugal | L | Probably clinical-acute | NR; probably C | Yes/NR | 43/41 (95.3%)/27.60 ± 8.45 | P1: NR (last available evaluation before COVID-19 lockdown period) 1 D1: 30 April 2020–15 May 2020 | Eating disorder psychopathology |
Matsunaga 2020 [73] | OCD | Japan | L | NR | C | Yes/>3 years | 60 (total), of these: fully remitted persons: n = 24,partially remitted persons: n = 36/total sample: 35 (58.3%)/total sample: 41.5 ± 7.9 | P1: NR (before December 2019) D1: 7 April 2020–2 May 2020 | OCD severity |
Orhan 2021 [62] | BD | Netherlands | L | Probably outpatient | C | NR/NR (chronic: >2 years; see recruitment) | 81/45 (55.6%)/66.1 ± 7.2 | P1: 2017–2018 D1: April 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; (hypo-)maniac symptoms; loneliness |
Pan 2021 [64] | OCD; DD; AD (mixed but also subgroup data reported for three different diagnoses and subdiagnoses along with total patient sample) | Netherlands | L | NR | C | Yes/NR | Overall: 1517, lifetime mental health disorder: 1181 (77.9%), panic disorder: n = 428–481; generalized anxiety disorder: n = 413–456; agoraphobia: n = 360–404; social anxiety disorder: n = 465–523; major depressive disorder: n = 852–984; dysthymic disorder: n = 336–373; obsessive compulsive disorder: n = 120–124 (only outcomes anxiety and loneliness assessed in this subgroup). Overall: 976 (64%); patients: 791 (67%); Overall: 56.1 ± 13.2; patients: 55.7 ± 12.9 2 | P1: 2006–2016 D1: 1 April 2020–13 May 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; loneliness |
Peckham 2021 [59] | Mixed (schizophrenia or delusional/psychotic illness or bipolar disorder), but no subgroup data reported | UK | L | NR | C | NR/NR | 367/180 (49%)/50.5 (SD NR) | P1: April 2016–March 2020 D1: July 2020–December 2020 | / |
Pinkham 2020 [65] | SSOPD (mixed for ‘affective disorder’, i.e., bipolar and depressive disorders, but also subgroup data for schizophrenia spectrum reported) | USA | L | Outpatient | C | NR/NR | Schizophrenia spectrum: 92; affective disorders: 56/schizophrenia spectrum: 50 (54.3%); affective disorders: 40 (71.4%)/schizophrenia spectrum: 42.95 ± 10.76; affective disorders: 40.77 ± 11.76 | P1: 4 December 2018–4 January 2019 (study 1) and 11 July 2019–21 July 2019 (study 2); pre-pandemic symptom severity averaged across all completed surveys D1: 3 April 2020–4 June 2020 | Energized/excited; hearing voices; sad/depressed; sleep (in hours); substances used; well-being |
Rutherford 2021 [61] | PTSD | USA | L | Probably outpatient | C | NR/chronic PTSD (duration at least 6 months) | 46/25 (54.3%)/62.5 ± 9.0 | P1: before 13 March 2020 D1: 1 April 2020–8 May 2020 | Depressive symptoms; post-traumatic stress symptoms |
Seitz 2021 [67] | Mixed (PTSD, MDD, SSD; no subgroup data reported) | Germany | L | Mixed inpatient/outpatient | C | Yes/NR | 63/NR: Only provided for full sample (individuals with psychiatric disorders and healthy volunteers)/NR | P1: September 2018–November 2019 D1: 16 April 2020–18 May 2020 | General psychopathology |
Sharma 2021 [74] | OCD | India | R-CS | Outpatient | C | Yes/age at onset of OCD: pandemic cohort: 21.44 ± 8.52; historical cohort: 21.83 ± 8.53; duration of illness: pandemic cohort: 10.92 ± 7.41, historical cohort: 11.14 ± 7.98 | Pandemic cohort: 240/89 (37%)/32.28 ± 9.70; historical cohort (data from medical records of independent set of OCD patients followed up during same period 1 year prior): 207/72 (34.8%)/32.97 ± 11.14 | Historical control cohort: P1: NR, baseline assessment (first visit to OCD clinic) P2: 1 October 2018–28 February 2019 (FU visit in clinic; 1 year prior to FU visit of pandemic cohort) P3: April 2019–May 2019 (2nd FU visit in clinic; 1 year prior to 2nd FU visit of pandemic cohort) Pandemic cohort: P1: NR, baseline assessment (first visit to OCD clinic) P2: 1 October 2019–29 February 2020 3 (FU visit in clinic before pandemic) D1: 26 April 2020–12 May 2020 (telephonic FU during pandemic) | OCD severity |
Strauss 2022 [57] | SSOPD | USA | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/NR (chronic) | 32 patients with chronic schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorders/patients: 24 (75%)/patients: 40.13 ± 13.25 | P1: ~August–November 2018 ± 6 monthsD1: July 2020–October 2020 | Motivation and pleasure |
B. Peri-pandemic changes of mental health | |||||||||
Adams 2021 [75] | ASD | USA | L | NR | C | Yes/age of autism diagnosis/at onset: 8.71 ± 4.66; duration: 17.74 | 322 (participants consented); 315 completed survey at D1; 275 completed survey at D2; 275 completed both surveys + were analyzed/135 (49.1%)/26.45 ± 4.66 | D1: 11 March 2020–20 March 2020 D2:18 May 2020–27 May 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; stress |
Bal 2021 [76] | ASD | USA | L | NR | Self-reported | Yes/pre-pandemic: 83.8% with previous mental health diagnosis, 42% with diagnosis before 18 years | 396 (completed both surveys)/233 (58.8%)/37.38 ± 13.36 | D1: 30 March 2020–10 April 2020 D2: 27 May 2020–6 June 2020 | Psychological distress |
Brondino 2020 [77] | ASD | Italy | L | Daycare | C | Yes/NR | 18/5 (27.8%)/22.72 ± 4.75 | D1: 19 February 2020 4 D2: 4 March 2020 | Psychiatric symptoms and problem behaviors |
Carta 2021 [78] | BD | Italy, Tunisia | L | Probably outpatient | C | Yes/≥1 year (in treatment) | Cagliari (exposed to rigid lockdown): 40/28 (70%)/48.57 ± 11.64; Tunis (less severe lockdown/not exposed): 30/16 (53.3%)/41.8 ± 13.22 | D1: April 2020 D2: June 2020 | Circadian rhythms; depressive symptoms |
Daly 2021 [58] | SSOPD; OCD; ED; BD; DD; AD; PTSD (mixed but also subgroup data reported) | USA | L | NR | Self-reported | NR/NR | Of 7319 patients in total sample, 27.5% (n = 2013) reporting pre-existing mental health diagnoses; anxiety disorders: 16.2% (n = NR); bipolar disorders: 3.4% (n = NR); depressive disorders: 19.1% (n = NR); eating disorders: 1.9% (n = NR); obsessive compulsive disorders: 3.1% (n = NR); post-traumatic stress disorders: 6.4% (n = NR); schizophrenia/psychotic disorders: 0.8% (n = NR)/3755 (51.3%)/48.9 ± 16.5 2 | D1: 10–18 March 2020 D2: 1–14 April 2020 D3: 15–28 April 2020 D4: 29 April–12 May 2020 D5: 13–26 May 2020 D6: 27 May–9 June 2020 D7:10–23 June 2020 D8: 24 June–20 July 2020 | Psychological distress |
Davide 2020 [79] | OCD | Italy | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/NR | 30/16 (53.33%)/43.17 ± 14.87 | D1: January 2020–February 2020 4 D2: 16–17 April 2020 | OCD severity |
Donati 2021 [80] | GD | Italy | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/7 years on average (under treatment) | 135/26 (19%)/50.07 ± 13.33 | D1: NR (before lockdown) 4 D2: 7 April 2020–28 May 2020 | Gambling problem symptoms (total score) |
Gaume 2021 [81] | SUD | Switzerland | L | Mixed inpatient/outpatient | NR; probably C | Yes/NR | D1: 49; D2: 51/D1: 11 (22.9%); D2: 12 (27.3%)/D1: Mdn (IQR): 39 (32–50); D2: 41 (34–48) | D1: 17–24 April 2020 D2: 4–8 May 2020 | Use of heroin/cocaine/cannabis; impact of pandemic on alcohol use/use of prescription drugs/other drugs; impact of pandemic on mental health in general |
Hennigan 2021 [52] | Mixed; various anxiety disorders and OCD; no subgroup data reported) | Ireland | L | NR | C | Yes/NR | Total (mixed): 24/16 (66.7%)/37.4 ± 11.4 | D1: ~April 2020 (appr. 6 months before assessment 1) 5 D2: 15 October 2020–29 October 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; global functioning; impact of COVID-19 pandemic on mood symptoms, social functioning, quality of life. |
Hochstatter 2021 [82] | SUD | USA | R-CS | Other, mobile health application | NR; probably C | Yes/NR | 64/16 (25%)/49 (NR) | D1: 31 January 2020–12 March 2020 6 D2: 24 March 2020–4 May 2020 | Alcohol use/marijuana use/other illicit drugs |
Leenaerts 2021 [83] | ED | Belgium | L | NR | C | Yes/maximum illness duration of 5 years (inclusion criterion); Mdn = 3 (IQR: 2–5) years | 15/15 (100%)/Mdn (IQR) = 23 (4) | D1: 10 January 2020–14 March 2020 D2: 19 March 2020–9 May 2020 | Loss of control over their eating behavior/binge eating episode |
Lugo-Marín 2021 [18] | ASD | Spain | L | NR | C | Yes/NR (chronic; see recruitment) | 35/12 (34.3%)/32.8 ± 13.1 | D1: NR (pre-lockdown) 7 D2: NR (postlockdown; 8 weeks after lockdown onset) | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; psychological distress |
Ma 2020 [84] | SSOPD | China | L | Clinical-chronic/Rehabilitation | C | Yes/course of psychosis (years): isolation group: 20.20 ± 9.26 years; long-term hospitalization (length of hospitalization): isolation group: 4.90 ± 2.67 years | 30/18 (60%)/43.17 ± 11.55 | D1: NR (before isolation) D2: assessments on 10th–14th days of isolation (isolation period for 30 participants: 10 January 2020–30 April 2020) | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; psychological stress; severity of participants’ psychiatric symptoms; sleep quality |
Ma 2021 [85] | SSOPD | China | L | Clinical-chronic/Rehabilitation | C | Yes/course of schizophrenia: M ± SD = 6.8 ± 5.6 years | 21/12 (57.1%)/43.1 ± 2.6 | D1: 01/2020 (patients were uninfected) 8 D2: NR (within 3 days of diagnosis with COVID-19 after patient was transferred to isolation ward) D3: NR (after patients were cured; before they were transferred out of isolation ward; transfer of last cured patient on 30 March 2020) | Psychopathology; stress |
Nisticò 2021 [86] | ED | Italy | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/NR | 59/57 (97%)/30.1 ± 12.9 | D1: 25 April 2020–28 April 2020 D2: 25 June 2020–28 June 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; psychological distress; losing control over food; stress; well-being |
Seethaler 2021 [55] | Mixed (affective or anxiety disorders; no subgroup data reported) | Germany | L | Mixed inpatient/outpatient | C | Yes/NR | D1: 32; D2: 24/D1: 20 (62.5%); D2: 16 (66.67%)/D1: 77.94 ± 8.12; D2: 78.25 ± 8.43 | D1: April 2020–May 2020 D2: August 2020 | Anxiety; current suicidality (suicidal thoughts, suicidal plans, suicidal attempt); depressive symptoms; severity of illness |
Wynn 2021 [56] | SSOPD | USA | L | NR | C | NR/NR | 81/9 (11.1)/54.4 ± 9.8 | D1: mid May 2020–mid August 2020 D2: mid August 2020–mid October 2020 | Alcohol use/cannabis use; anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; loneliness; motivation and pleasure |
C. Both pre- to peri-pandemic and peri-pandemic changes of mental health | |||||||||
Liu 2021 [87] | SUD | China | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/course of drug addiction: 22.32 ± 8.42 years | 76/26 (34.2%)/48.53 ± 5.99 | P1: October 2019–December 2019 D1: February 2020–April 2020 (outbreak) D2: May 2020–June 2020 (postpandemic) | Anxiety symptoms; alcohol consumption; amphetamine/morphine use; depressive symptoms; stress; tobacco consumption |
Mergel 2021 (follow-up study); Schützwohl 2020 (original study reporting two assessments) [54] | Mixed (schizophrenia, affective disorders, anxiety disorders, personality disorders; no subgroup data reported but separate data for patients with chronic and acute mental disorders) | Germany | L | Group 1 (chronic mental disorders): Residential care Group 2 (acute mental disorders): Clinical-acute | C | Yes/chronicity: group 1 (chronic): 6–10 years: 26.1%, >10 years: 73.9%; acute group (group 2): <2 years: 4%, 2–5 years: 16%, 6–10 years: 24%, >10 years: 56% | Total: P1: 174; D1: 132; D2: 106; group 1 (chronic mental disorders; not acutely ill in 4 weeks prior to initial survey): n = 19–27; group 2 (acute mental disorders): n = 26–30/group 1: 13 (48.1%); group 2: 18 (60.0%)/group 1: 49.7 ± 13.1; group 2: 44.0 ± 11.8 | P1: August 2019–March 2020 D1: 23 March 2020–20 April 2020 D2: 22 June 2020–19 July 2020; first two assessments reported in Schützwohl 2020 | Anxiety symptoms; depressive symptoms; perceived impairments in social participation (close personal relationships, stress and extraordinary strain); psychological distress |
Riblet 2021 [66] | Mixed (MDD; BAD type I, Psychotic Disorder, PTSD, PD, agoraphobia, GAD, SAD, OCD, AUD, SUD), but no subgroup data reported | USA | L | Outpatient | C | Yes/NR | 11/1 (9.1%)/48.0 ± 17.7 | P1: October 2019–December 2019 P2: November 2019–January 2020 D1: February 2020–March 2020 9 D2: 23 April 2020–04 May 2020 | Hopelessness; suicidal ideation; thwarted belongingness |
Yocum 2021 [88] | BD (mixed; mostly bipolar disorders) | USA | L | Mixed inpatient/outpatient | C | NR/NR | 560 (total), 345 (participants with bipolar disorder), 147 (healthy controls)/381 (68%) of total sample (bipolar + healthy controls), NR for bipolar patients/49 (NR) of total sample (bipolar + healthy control), NR for bipolar patients | For pre- to peri-pandemic changes: P1: 15 March 2015–2019 to 30 May 2015–2019 D1: 15 March 2020–30 May 2020 For peri-pandemic changes: D1: 30 April 2020 D2: 14 May 2020 D3: 28 May 2020 | Anxiety symptoms (pre- vs. during and peri-pandemic); degree of change/disruption due to COVID-19 pandemic (experiencing pandemic-related stress; only peri-pandemic); depressive symptoms (pre- vs. during and peri-pandemic); sleep (% bad sleep quality; pre- vs. during and peri-pandemic) |
3.2. Quality Assessment
3.3. Mental Health Effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic Compared to Pre-Pandemic Baseline and Peri-Pandemic Changes of Mental Health
3.3.1. Autism Spectrum Disorders
3.3.2. Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders
3.3.3. Bipolar Disorders
3.3.4. Depressive Disorders
3.3.5. Anxiety Disorders
3.3.6. Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders
3.3.7. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders
3.3.8. Eating Disorders
3.3.9. Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders
3.3.10. Mixed Group
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Pre- to peri-pandemic changes For each study providing mental health data prior to and after the pandemic outbreak, mental health effects were classified as one of the following five effect directions, based on the available comparisons for a specific outcome. | |
Direction 1: Clear effect for better peri-pandemic MH (↑) | Effect in the direction of pandemic assessment (i.e., mental health improved during the pandemic compared to before), with clear indication that the 95% confidence interval (CI) does not contain the null or p < 0.05. |
Direction 2: Unclear effect for potentially better peri-pandemic MH (↗) | Effect in the direction of pandemic assessment (i.e., mental health improved compared to before); however, either the 95% CI contains the null effect or p > 0.05. |
Direction 3: Null effect (∎) | No difference seen between peri-pandemic and pre-pandemic assessment. We classified studies only narratively reporting that ‘no significant difference was observed’ (without further details) as well as studies reporting an actual null effect based on an effect estimate (e.g., Cohen’s d = 0). |
Direction 4: Unclear effect for potentially better pre-pandemic MH (↘) | Effect in the direction of pre-pandemic assessment (i.e., better mental health before the pandemic); however, either the 95% CI contains the null effect or p > 0.05. |
Direction 5: Clear effect for better pre-pandemic MH (↓) | Effect in the direction of pre-pandemic assessment (i.e., better mental health before the pandemic), with clear indication that the 95% CI does not contain the null or p < 0.05. |
Peri-pandemic changes For each study reporting several peri-pandemic assessments, changes in mental health were classified as one of the following five effect directions, based on the available comparisons for a specific outcome. | |
Direction 1: Clear effect for MH improvement during the pandemic (↑) | Effect in the direction of later pandemic assessment (i.e., mental health improved over the course of the pandemic), with clear indication that the 95% confidence interval (CI) does not contain the null or p < 0.05. |
Direction 2: Unclear effect for potential MH improvement during the pandemic (↗) | Effect in the direction of later pandemic assessment (i.e., mental health improved over the course of the pandemic); however, either the 95% CI contains the null effect or p > 0.05. |
Direction 3: Null effect (∎) | No difference seen between peri-pandemic assessments. We classified studies only narratively reporting that ‘no significant difference was observed’ (without further details) as well as studies reporting an actual null effect based on an effect estimate (e.g., Cohen’s d = 0). |
Direction 4: Unclear effect for potential MH deterioration during the pandemic (↘) | Effect in the direction of earlier pandemic assessment (i.e., mental health deteriorated over the course of the pandemic); however, either the 95% CI contains the null effect or p > 0.05. |
Direction 5: Clear effect for MH deterioration during the pandemic (↓) | Effect in the direction of earlier pandemic assessment (i.e., mental health deteriorated over the course of the pandemic), with clear indication that the 95% CI does not contain the null or p < 0.05. |
Outcomes | Clear Effect for Better Peri-Pandemic MH/MH Improvement during Pandemic | Unclear Effect for Potentially Better Peri-Pandemic MH/Potential MH Improvement during Pandemic | NA 1 (Better Peri-Pandemic MH/MH Improvement during Pandemic) | Null Effect | NA 2 (Better Pre-Pandemic MH/MH Deterioration during Pandemic) | Unclear Effect for Potentially Better Pre-Pandemic MH/Potential MH Deterioration during Pandemic | Clear Effect for Better Pre-Pandemic MH/MH Deterioration during Pandemic |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
A. Pre- to peri-pandemic changes of mental health | |||||||
Autism spectrum disorders | |||||||
Psychological distress | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Depressive symptoms | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Diminished motivation and pleasure | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Excitement/energization | ↑↑ | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Hallucination | ↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Sleep quantity | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Substance use | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Well-being | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Bipolar disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Depressive symptoms | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
(Hypo-)manic symptoms | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Loneliness | - | - | - | ∎ | - | - | - |
Sleep quality 3 | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Depressive disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | ↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Depressive symptoms | ↑↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Loneliness | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Anxiety disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | - | ↗↗↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Depressive symptoms | - | ↗↗↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Loneliness | - | ↗↗↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Obsessive-compulsive disorders 4 | |||||||
Anxiety | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Loneliness | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
OCD severity | - | - | △NA | - | ▽NA▽NA | - | ↓ |
Post-traumatic stress disorders | |||||||
Depressive symptoms | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Post-traumatic stress symptoms | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Eating disorders | |||||||
Depressive symptoms | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | ↓ |
Eating disorder-specific psychopathology | ↑↑↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | ↓ ↓ |
Loss of control overeating behavior 5 | ↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | ↓ |
Psychological distress | ↑↑↑ | ↗↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Substance-related disorders | |||||||
Alcohol use | - | - | - | - | ▽NA | ↘ | ↓ |
Amphetamine use | - | - | △NA | - | ▽NA | - | - |
Anxiety | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Depressive symptoms | - | - | - | - | ▽NA | - | ↓ |
Morphine use | - | - | △NA | - | ▽NA | - | - |
Stress | - | - | - | - | ▽NA | - | ↓ |
Tobacco use | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓↓ |
Gambling disorders | |||||||
- | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Mixed (no subgroup data reported) | |||||||
Anxiety | ↑↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘↘ | - |
Depressive symptoms | ↑↑ | ↗ | △NA △NA△NA | ∎ | ▽NA | ↘↘ | - |
Loneliness (thwarted belongingness) | - | - | △NA △NA | - | ▽NA ▽NA | - | - |
Psychological distress | ↑↑ | ↗↗ | - | - | ▽NA | ↘ | - |
Sleep quantity | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Social functioning/relationships | ↑ | ↗ | - | ∎ | - | ↘↘ | - |
Stress | ↑↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Suicidality | - | - | △NA △NA △NA △NA | - | - | - | - |
Well-being 6 | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
B. Peri-pandemic changes of mental health | |||||||
Autism spectrum disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | - | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Depressive symptoms | ↑ | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Psychological distress | ↑ | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Stress | - | ↗ | △NA | - | - | - | - |
Schizophrenia spectrum and other psychotic disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Depressive symptoms | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Diminished motivation and pleasure | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Loneliness | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Psychological distress | - | ↗↗↗↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Sleep quality | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Stress | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | ↓↓ |
Substance use | - | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Bipolar disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | - | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Circadian rhythms | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Depressive symptoms | - | ↗↗↗ | - | ∎ | - | - | - |
Psychological distress | - | - | - | - | - | ↘↘ | - |
Sleep quality 3 | - | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Stress 7 | - | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Depressive disorders | |||||||
Psychological distress | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Anxiety disorders | |||||||
Psychological distress | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Obsessive-compulsive disorders | |||||||
Psychological distress | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
OCD severity | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Post-traumatic stress disorders | |||||||
Psychological distress | - | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Eating disorders | |||||||
Anxiety | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Depressive symptoms | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Loss of control overeating behavior 5 | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Psychological distress | - | ↗↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Stress | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Well-being | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Substance-related disorders | |||||||
Alcohol use | ↑ | ↗ | - | ∎ | - | - | - |
Amphetamine use | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Anxiety | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Cannabis/marijuana use | - | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Cocaine use | - | - | △NA | - | - | - | - |
Depressive symptoms | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Heroin use | - | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Morphine use | - | - | - | - | - | - | ↓ |
Psychological distress | - | - | - | ∎ | - | - | - |
Stress | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Tobacco use | - | - | - | - | ▽NA | - | - |
Use of other drugs | ↑ | - | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Use of prescription drugs | - | - | - | ∎ | - | - | - |
Gambling disorders | |||||||
Gambling problem symptoms | ↑ | - | - | - | - | - | - |
Mixed (no subgroup data reported) | |||||||
Anxiety | - | ↗ | △NA | ∎ | - | ↘ | - |
Depressive symptoms | - | ↗↗↗↗ | - | - | ▽NA | - | - |
Loneliness (thwarted belongingness) | - | - | △NA | - | - | - | - |
Psychological distress | - | ↗↗↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Social functioning/relationships | ↑ | ↗↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
Stress | - | ↗ | - | - | - | ↘ | - |
Suicidality | - | - | △NA | - | ▽NA | - | - |
Well-being 6 | - | ↗ | - | - | - | - | - |
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Kunzler, A.M.; Lindner, S.; Röthke, N.; Schäfer, S.K.; Metzendorf, M.-I.; Sachkova, A.; Müller-Eberstein, R.; Klinger, C.; Burns, J.; Coenen, M.; et al. Mental Health Impact of Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Individuals with Pre-Existing Mental Disorders: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Research. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 948. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20020948
Kunzler AM, Lindner S, Röthke N, Schäfer SK, Metzendorf M-I, Sachkova A, Müller-Eberstein R, Klinger C, Burns J, Coenen M, et al. Mental Health Impact of Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Individuals with Pre-Existing Mental Disorders: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(2):948. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20020948
Chicago/Turabian StyleKunzler, Angela M., Saskia Lindner, Nikolaus Röthke, Sarah K. Schäfer, Maria-Inti Metzendorf, Alexandra Sachkova, Roxana Müller-Eberstein, Carmen Klinger, Jacob Burns, Michaela Coenen, and et al. 2023. "Mental Health Impact of Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Individuals with Pre-Existing Mental Disorders: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Research" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 2: 948. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20020948
APA StyleKunzler, A. M., Lindner, S., Röthke, N., Schäfer, S. K., Metzendorf, M. -I., Sachkova, A., Müller-Eberstein, R., Klinger, C., Burns, J., Coenen, M., & Lieb, K. (2023). Mental Health Impact of Early Stages of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Individuals with Pre-Existing Mental Disorders: A Systematic Review of Longitudinal Research. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(2), 948. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20020948