Portrait of mental health identified by people with the post-covid syndrome

被引:0
作者
Mayo, Nancy E. [1 ]
Hum, Stanley [2 ]
Matout, Mohamad [3 ]
Fellows, Lesley K. [4 ]
Brouillette, Marie-Josee [3 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Fac Med & Hlth Sci, Sch Phys & Occupat Therapy, Dept Med, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[2] McGill Univ, Montreal Neurol Inst, Brain Hlth Outcomes Platform BHOP, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[3] McGill Univ, Fac Med & Hlth Sci, Dept Psychiat, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[4] McGill Univ, Montreal Neurol Inst, Fac Med & Hlth Sci, Dept Neurol & Neurosurg, Montreal, PQ, Canada
关键词
Post-covid syndrome; Mental health; Bertopic analysis; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; DEPRESSION;
D O I
10.1007/s11136-024-03719-8
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
ObjectivesThis study aimed to produce a patient-centered understanding of mental health symptoms of people with the post-COVID-19 syndrome (PCS).MethodsA cross-sectional analysis of 414 participants in a longitudinal study was carried out involving people who self-identified as having symptoms of PCS. People were asked to name their most frequent and most bothersome mental health symptoms affected by PCS using the structure of the Patient Generated Index (PGI). The text threads from the PGI were grouped into topics using BERTopic analysis.Results20 topics were identified from 818 text threads referring to PCS mental health symptoms. 35% of threads were identified as relating to anxiety, discussed in terms of five topics: generalized/social anxiety, fear/worry, post-traumatic stress, panic, and nervous. 29% of threads were identified as relating to low mood, represented by five topics: depression, discouragement, emotional distress, sadness, and loneliness. A cognitive domain (22% of threads) was covered by four topics referring to concentration, memory, brain fog, and mental fatigue. Topics related to frustration, anger, irritability. and mood swings (7%) were considered as one domain and there were separate topics related to motivation, insomnia, and isolation.ConclusionsThis novel method of digital transformation of unstructured text data uncovered different ways in which people think about classical mental health domains. This information could be used to evaluate whether existing measures cover the content identified by people with PCS, to initiate a clinical conversation, or to justify the development of a new measure of the mental health impact of PCS. Why is this study needed?The symptoms of infection with the COVID-19 virus can last a very long time and this situation has been called the post-COVID syndrome (PCS) or long COVID. PCS is a poorly understood condition with symptoms affecting all body systems with both primary and secondary effects on mental health.What is the key problem/issue/question this manuscript addresses?A long time ago, a famous scientist (Lord Kelvin) said you can't fix what you can't measure, and you can't measure what you don't understand. This study is about starting the understanding part of the mental health consequences of PCS.What is the main point of your study?The main point of the study was to ascertain directly from people with PCS, in their own words, their most distressing mental health symptoms. This was preferred to asking people to fill out questionnaires on mental health symptoms that used fixed questions that were not developed for people with PCS.What are your main results and what do they mean?Anxiety and depression were the most common mental health effects and each was expressed in five different ways; cognitive problems were also common and expressed four different ways. People also identified experiencing frustration, anger, irritability, mood swings, apathy, insomnia, and isolation showing that PCS has very diverse effects not easily described using standard questionnaires.
引用
收藏
页码:2509 / 2516
页数:8
相关论文
共 38 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], About Us
[2]   Development and validation of a voice-of-the-patient measure of cognitive concerns experienced by people living with HIV [J].
Askari, Sorayya ;
Fellows, Lesley K. ;
Brouillette, Marie-Josee ;
Mayo, Nancy E. .
QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH, 2021, 30 (03) :921-930
[3]   Persistent neuropsychiatric symptoms after COVID-19: a systematic review and meta-analysis [J].
Badenoch, James B. ;
Rengasamy, Emma R. ;
Watson, Cameron ;
Jansen, Katrin ;
Chakraborty, Stuti ;
Sundaram, Ritika D. ;
Hafeez, Danish ;
Burchill, Ella ;
Saini, Aman ;
Thomas, Lucretia ;
Cross, Benjamin ;
Hunt, Camille K. ;
Conti, Isabella ;
Ralovska, Sylvia ;
Hussain, Zain ;
Butler, Matthew ;
Pollak, Thomas A. ;
Koychev, Ivan ;
Michael, Benedict D. ;
Holling, Heinz ;
Nicholson, Timothy R. ;
Rogers, Jonathan P. ;
Rooney, Alasdair G. .
BRAIN COMMUNICATIONS, 2022, 4 (01)
[4]   Long-Term Consequences of COVID-19 in Predominantly Immunonaive Patients: A Canadian Prospective Population-Based Study [J].
Benoit-Piau, Justine ;
Tremblay, Karine ;
Piche, Alain ;
Dallaire, Frederic ;
Belanger, Mathieu ;
d'Entremont, Marc-Andre ;
Pasquier, Jean-Charles ;
Fortin, Martin ;
Bourque, Catherine ;
Lapointe, Fanny ;
Betala-Belinga, Jean-Francois ;
Petit, Genevieve ;
Jourdan, Guillaume ;
Bahous, Renata ;
Maya, Camilo ;
Benzina, Amira ;
Faiyaz Hossain, Muhammad ;
Peel, Marie-Audrey ;
Houle, Olivier ;
Auger, Marie-Sandrine ;
Rioux, Antoine ;
Farand, Paul .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL MEDICINE, 2023, 12 (18)
[5]  
CDC, 2024, Long COVID Terms and Definitions
[6]   Fatigue and cognitive impairment in Post-COVID-19 Syndrome: A systematic review and meta-analysis [J].
Ceban, Felicia ;
Ling, Susan ;
Lui, Leanna M. W. ;
Lee, Yena ;
Gill, Hartej ;
Teopiz, Kayla M. ;
Rodrigues, Nelson B. ;
Subramaniapillai, Mehala ;
Di Vincenzo, Joshua D. ;
Cao, Bing ;
Lin, Kangguang ;
Mansur, Rodrigo B. ;
Ho, Roger C. ;
Rosenblat, Joshua D. ;
Miskowiak, Kamilla W. ;
Vinberg, Maj ;
Maletic, Vladimir ;
McIntyre, Roger S. .
BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY, 2022, 101 :93-135
[7]   Global Prevalence of Post-Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) Condition or Long COVID: A Meta-Analysis and Systematic Review [J].
Chen, Chen ;
Haupert, Spencer R. ;
Zimmermann, Lauren ;
Shi, Xu ;
Fritsche, Lars G. ;
Mukherjee, Bhramar .
JOURNAL OF INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2022, 226 (09) :1593-1607
[8]  
Dolatabadi Elham, 2023, J Med Internet Res, V25, pe45767, DOI 10.2196/45767
[9]  
Grootendorst M., 2023, BERTOPIC FREQUENTLY
[10]  
Grootendorst M., 2022, ARXIV