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Lifestyle and mental health disruptions during COVID-19.

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TLDR
It is suggested that disruption to physical activity is a leading risk factor for depression during the pandemic and restoration of those habits-either naturally or through policy intervention-has limited impact on restoring mental well-being.
Abstract
Using a longitudinal dataset linking biometric and survey data from several cohorts of young adults before and during the COVID-19 pandemic ([Formula: see text]), we document large disruptions to physical activity, sleep, time use, and mental health. At the onset of the pandemic, average steps decline from 10,000 to 4,600 steps per day, sleep increases by 25 to 30 min per night, time spent socializing declines by over half to less than 30 min, and screen time more than doubles to over 5 h per day. Over the course of the pandemic from March to July 2020 the proportion of participants at risk for clinical depression ranges from 46% to 61%, up to a 90% increase in depression rates compared to the same population just prior to the pandemic. Our analyses suggest that disruption to physical activity is a leading risk factor for depression during the pandemic. However, restoration of those habits through a short-term intervention does not meaningfully improve mental well-being.

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Citations
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Behavioral changes during the COVID-19 pandemic decreased income diversity of urban encounters

TL;DR: In this article , the authors study how individual income diversity of urban encounters changed during the pandemic, using a large-scale, privacy-enhanced mobility dataset of more than one million anonymized mobile phone users in Boston, Dallas, Los Angeles, and Seattle.
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Risk Factors for COVID-19 in College Students Identified by Physical, Mental, and Social Health Reported During the Fall 2020 Semester: Observational Study Using the Roadmap App and Fitbit Wearable Sensors

- 10 Feb 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors leveraged mobile health (mHealth) technology and sought to characterize self-reported outcomes of physical, mental, and social health by COVID-19 status; assess physical activity through consumer-grade wearable sensors (Fitbit); and identify risk factors associated with COVID19 positivity in a population of college students.
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COVID-19 vaccine hesitancy and vaccine passports: a cross-sectional conjoint experiment in Japan

TL;DR: Easing of public health restrictions such as travel, wearing face masks and dining out at night was associated with an increase in vaccine acceptance by 4%–10%, and interventions to mitigate against these may help to reduce vaccine hesitancy.
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U.S. agricultural university students' mental well‐being and resilience during the first wave of COVID‐19: Discordant expectations and experiences across genders

TL;DR: In this paper , personal, social, and environmental factors linked with lower mental health and life satisfaction scores for students in agriculture during the COVID-19 pandemic led to a decline in mental health, especially women.
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SARS-CoV-2 vaccines in children and adolescents: Can immunization prevent hospitalization?

TL;DR: In this article , the safety and efficacy profiles of mRNA vaccines (BNT162b2 and mRNA-1273) have been evaluated in clinical trials or observed in the real world.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The CES-D Scale: A Self-Report Depression Scale for Research in the General Population

TL;DR: The CES-D scale as discussed by the authors is a short self-report scale designed to measure depressive symptomatology in the general population, which has been used in household interview surveys and in psychiatric settings.
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The psychological impact of quarantine and how to reduce it: rapid review of the evidence.

TL;DR: A review of the psychological impact of quarantine using three electronic databases is presented in this article, where the authors report negative psychological effects including post-traumatic stress symptoms, confusion, and anger.
Journal Article

A Brief Measure for Assessing Generalized Anxiety Disorder: The GAD-7

TL;DR: The GAD-7 is a valid and efficient tool for screening for GAD and assessing its severity in clinical practice and research.
Journal ArticleDOI

The PHQ-9: A new depression diagnostic and severity measure

TL;DR: A number of case-finding instruments for detecting depression in primary care, ranging from 2 to 28 items, tend to be highly correlated, with little evidence that one measure is superior to any other.
Journal ArticleDOI

The brief resilience scale: assessing the ability to bounce back.

TL;DR: The brief resilience scale (BRS) is a reliable means of assessing resilience as the ability to bounce back or recover from stress and may provide unique and important information about people coping with health-related stressors.
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