Author: Seitz, Katja I.; Bertsch, Katja; Herpertz, Sabine C.
Title: A Prospective Study of Mental Health During the COVIDâ€19 Pandemic in Childhood Trauma–Exposed Individuals: Social Support Matters Cord-id: kvuec6qh Document date: 2021_2_11
ID: kvuec6qh
Snippet: The novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic and its unprecedented social restrictions may have serious mental health implications, especially in individuals who have experienced childhood traumatic experiences (CTEs). This prospective study aimed to investigate whether general psychopathology and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptom severity increased during the pandemic as compared to prepandemic baseline data collected approximately 1 year earlier. Furthermore, we investig
Document: The novel coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19) pandemic and its unprecedented social restrictions may have serious mental health implications, especially in individuals who have experienced childhood traumatic experiences (CTEs). This prospective study aimed to investigate whether general psychopathology and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptom severity increased during the pandemic as compared to prepandemic baseline data collected approximately 1 year earlier. Furthermore, we investigated whether an increase in symptomatology was linked to CTEs and mediated by a lack of perceived social support and fear of COVIDâ€19. An online survey was administered to 85 individuals, including both participants with PTSD, major depression, or somatic symptom disorder (n = 63) and healthy volunteers (n = 22), during a period of the most severe social restrictions in Germany. The survey included the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire, Brief Symptom Inventory, PTSD Checklist for DSMâ€5, ENRICHD Social Support Inventory, and Fear of COVIDâ€19 Scale. In the whole sample, we found significant increases in general psychopathology and PTSD symptom severity, ω(2) = .07–.08, during as compared to before the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, with CTEs predicting increased PTSD symptom severity, β = .245, p = .042. This effect was mediated by a lack of perceived social support, indirect effect = .101, 95% CI [.013, .209], but not fear of COVIDâ€19, indirect effect = .060, 95% CI [−.035, .167]. These findings emphasize the importance of interventions that promote social inclusion to mitigate the potentially detrimental effects of public health actions implemented against the COVIDâ€19 pandemic in individuals with CTEs.
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