Psychosocial impact of COVID-19.
Souvik Dubey,Payel Biswas,Ritwik Ghosh,Subhankar Chatterjee,Mahua Jana Dubey,Subham Chatterjee,Durjoy Lahiri,Carl J. Lavie +7 more
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TLDR
The psychosocial aspects of older people, their caregivers, psychiatric patients and marginalized communities are affected by this pandemic in different ways and need special attention.Abstract:
Background Along with its high infectivity and fatality rates, the 2019 Corona Virus Disease (COVID-19) has caused universal psychosocial impact by causing mass hysteria, economic burden and financial losses. Mass fear of COVID-19, termed as “coronaphobia”, has generated a plethora of psychiatric manifestations across the different strata of the society. So, this review has been undertaken to define psychosocial impact of COVID-19. Methods Pubmed and GoogleScholar are searched with the following key terms- “COVID-19”, “SARS-CoV2”, “Pandemic”, “Psychology”, “Psychosocial”, “Psychitry”, “marginalized”, “telemedicine”, “mental health”, “quarantine”, “infodemic”, “social media” and” “internet”. Few news paper reports related to COVID-19 and psychosocial impacts have also been added as per context. Results Disease itself multiplied by forced quarantine to combat COVID-19 applied by nationwide lockdowns can produce acute panic, anxiety, obsessive behaviors, hoarding, paranoia, and depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the long run. These have been fueled by an “infodemic” spread via different platforms of social media. Outbursts of racism, stigmatization, and xenophobia against particular communities are also being widely reported. Nevertheless, frontline healthcare workers are at higher-risk of contracting the disease as well as experiencing adverse psychological outcomes in form of burnout, anxiety, fear of transmitting infection, feeling of incompatibility, depression, increased substance-dependence, and PTSD. Community-based mitigation programs to combat COVID-19 will disrupt children’s usual lifestyle and may cause florid mental distress. The psychosocial aspects of older people, their caregivers, psychiatric patients and marginalized communities are affected by this pandemic in different ways and need special attention. Conclusion For better dealing with these psychosocial issues of different strata of the society, psychosocial crisis prevention and intervention models should be urgently developed by the government, health care personnel and other stakeholders. Apt application of internet services, technology and social media to curb both pandemic and infodemic needs to be instigated. Psychosocial preparedness by setting up mental organizations specific for future pandemics is certainly necessary.read more
Citations
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Sense of Coherence and Psychological Distress Among Healthcare Workers During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Spain
Juan Gómez-Salgado,Sara Domínguez-Salas,Macarena Romero-Martín,Mónica Ortega-Moreno,Juan Jesús García-Iglesias,Carlos Ruiz-Frutos +5 more
TL;DR: Both psychological distress and SOC were related to the presence of COVID-19 symptoms, as well as with contact history, and Professionals with psychological distress showed a lower SOC.
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The Role of Machine Learning Techniques to Tackle COVID-19 Crisis: A Systematic Review
Hafsa Bareen Syeda,Mahanazuddin Syed,Kevin W. Sexton,Shorabuddin Syed,Salma Begum,Farhan Syed,Feliciano B. Yu,Feliciano B. Yu +7 more
TL;DR: A systematic literature review on the role of ML as a comprehensive and decisive technology to fight the COVID-19 crisis in the arena of epidemiology, diagnosis, and disease progression highlights the important variables, data types, and available CO VID-19 resources that can assist in facilitating clinical and translational research.
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Methanol Mass Poisoning Outbreak: A Consequence of COVID-19 Pandemic and Misleading Messages on Social Media.
TL;DR: The first cases of COVID-19 were two patients died of unexplained sever acute pneumonia in Qom city, Central Iran, identified on February 18, 2020 and one month later, the virus spread around the country and as March 28, 2020, it left 35 408 documented cases ofCOVID-2019 with 2517 deaths.
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Emotional and Mental Wellbeing Following COVID-19 Public Health Measures on People Living With Dementia and Carers.
Kerry Hanna,Clarissa Giebel,Hilary Tetlow,Kym Ward,Justine Shenton,Jacqueline Cannon,Aravind Komuravelli,Anna Gaughan,Ruth Eley,Carol Rogers,Manoj Rajagopal,Stan Limbert,Steve Callaghan,Rosie Whittington,Sarah Butchard,Lisa Shaw,Mark Gabbay +16 more
TL;DR: In this article, there appears to be no evidence on the longer-term impacts caused by COVID-19 and its related public health restrictions on some of the most vulnerable in our societies.
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Cancer has not gone away: A primary care perspective to support a balanced approach for timely cancer diagnosis during COVID-19.
Charles W Helsper,Christine Campbell,Jon Emery,Richard D Neal,Li Li,Greg Rubin,Henk van Weert,Peter Vedsted,Fiona M Walter,David Weller,Larissa Nekhlyudov +10 more
TL;DR: This work presents a meta-analysis of clinical practice guidelines for general practice medicine and shows clear trends in improving the quality and efficiency of care for patients with complex medical conditions.
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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.
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Cuiyan Wang,Riyu Pan,Xiaoyang Wan,Yilin Tan,Linkang Xu,Cyrus S.H. Ho,Roger C.M. Ho,Roger C.M. Ho +7 more
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Factors Associated With Mental Health Outcomes Among Health Care Workers Exposed to Coronavirus Disease 2019.
Jianbo Lai,Simeng Ma,Ying Wang,Zhongxiang Cai,Jianbo Hu,Ning Wei,Jiang Wu,Hui Du,Tingting Chen,Ruiting Li,Huawei Tan,Lijun Kang,Lihua Yao,Manli Huang,Huafen Wang,Gaohua Wang,Zhongchun Liu,Shaohua Hu +17 more
TL;DR: Among Chinese health care workers exposed to COVID-19, women, nurses, those in Wuhan, and front-line health care Workers have a high risk of developing unfavorable mental health outcomes and may need psychological support or interventions.
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