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One Year of Evidence on Mental Health in the COVID-19 Crisis - A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Xi Chen; Jiyao Chen; Meimei Zhang; Richard Z Chen; Rebecca Kechen Dong; Zhe Dong; Yingying Ye; Lingyao Tong; Bryan Chen; Ruiying Zhao; Wenrui Cao; Peikai Li; Stephen X. Zhang.
Afiliação
  • Xi Chen; Daodao Network Technology Co, Ltd.
  • Jiyao Chen; College of Business, Oregon State University
  • Meimei Zhang; Department of Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences, Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center
  • Richard Z Chen; Crescent Valley High School, Corvallis
  • Rebecca Kechen Dong; School of Management, University of South Australia
  • Zhe Dong; College of Psychology, Capital Normal University
  • Yingying Ye; Department of psychology, Zhejiang University of Technology
  • Lingyao Tong; Department of Clinical, Neuro and Developmental Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • Bryan Chen; Crescent Valley High School, Corvallis
  • Ruiying Zhao; Department of Clinical, Neuro and Developmental Psychology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • Wenrui Cao; Department of Social, Health and Organizational Psychology, Utrecht University
  • Peikai Li; Department of Social, Health and Organizational Psychology, Utrecht University
  • Stephen X. Zhang; University of Adelaide
Preprint em En | PREPRINT-MEDRXIV | ID: ppmedrxiv-21250929
ABSTRACT
This paper provides a systematic review and meta-analysis on the prevalence rate of mental health issues of general population, general and frontline healthcare workers (HCWs) in China over one year of the COVID-19 crisis. We systematically searched PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Medrxiv at November 16th, 2020, pooled data using random-effects meta-analyses to estimate the prevalence rates, and ran meta-regression to tease out the heterogeneity. The meta-regression results uncovered several predictors of the prevalence rates, including severity, type of mental issues, population, sampling location, and study quality. Pooled prevalence rates are significantly different from, yet largely between, the findings of previous meta-analyses, suggesting the results of our larger study are consistent with yet more accurate than the findings of the smaller, previous meta-analyses. The prevalence rates of distress and insomnia and those of frontline HCWs are higher suggest future research and interventions should pay more attention to those mental outcomes and populations. Our findings suggest a need to examine the prevalence rates at varying levels of severity. The one-year cumulative evidence on sampling locations (Wuhan vs. non-Wuhan) corroborates the typhoon eye effect theory. Trial registrationCRD4202022059
Licença
cc_no
Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 09-preprints Base de dados: PREPRINT-MEDRXIV Tipo de estudo: Observational_studies / Prognostic_studies / Rct / Review / Systematic_reviews Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Preprint
Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 09-preprints Base de dados: PREPRINT-MEDRXIV Tipo de estudo: Observational_studies / Prognostic_studies / Rct / Review / Systematic_reviews Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2021 Tipo de documento: Preprint