Abstract

The rapid spread of COVID-19 caused many countries to decide to enter full lockdown, a circumstance that impacted all aspects of life, including mental health. The present longitudinal study aimed to analyse how stressors and uplifts of confinement were linked to psychological symptoms at three different time points: during the full lockdown (wave 1), after the gradual lifting of restrictions (wave 2) and after confinement (wave 3). The sample was made up by one hundred and twenty academic and administrative staff from a big University in Spain, they all completed an online survey. Results showed that psychological status did not change over time, but a significant interindividual variability was found throughout. Some stressors were only linked to symptoms at wave 1, but others maintained their associations during waves 2 and 3. Uplifts were, for the most part, inversely (and exclusively) linked to symptoms at wave 1. However, some of them, although enjoyable, were paradoxically linked to worse mental health at wave 1, and even at waves 2 and 3. These findings highlight the importance of providing preventive psychological strategies for mental distress before, during and after confinement.
Loading...

Quotes

2 appointments in WOS
0 citations in

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

URL external

Date

Description

© 2022 The Authors. Stress and Health published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.https://doi.org/10.1002/smi.3197

Citation

González Gutiérrez, J. L., Écija Gallardo, M. C., Matías Pompa, B., Alonso Fernández, M., Pacho Hernández, J. C., & López López, A. (2023). Stressors and uplifts of confinement due to covid-19: A longitudinal study on mental health in a sample of academic and administrative university staff in Spain. Stress and Health, 39(2), 429–448. https://doi.org/10.1002/smi.3197

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Statistics

Views
261
Downloads
87

Bibliographic managers

Document viewer

Select a file to preview:
Reload