Abstract

Background

The current pandemic of COVID-19 impacted the psychological wellbeing of populations globally.

Objectives

We aimed to examine the extent and identify factors associated with psychological distress, fear of COVID-19 and coping.

Methods

We conducted a cross-sectional study across 17 countries during Jun-2020 to Jan-2021. Levels of psychological distress (Kessler Psychological Distress Scale), fear of COVID-19 (Fear of COVID-19 Scale), and coping (Brief Resilient Coping Scale) were assessed.

Results

A total of 8,559 people participated; mean age (±SD) was 33(±13) years, 64% were females and 40% self-identified as frontline workers. More than two-thirds (69%) experienced moderate-to-very high levels of psychological distress, which was 46% in Thailand and 91% in Egypt. A quarter (24%) had high levels of fear of COVID-19, which was as low as 9% in Libya and as high as 38% in Bangladesh. More than half (57%) exhibited medium to high resilient coping; the lowest prevalence (3%) was reported in Australia and the highest (72%) in Syria. Being female (AOR 1.31 [95% CIs 1.09-1.57]), perceived distress due to change of employment status (1.56 [1.29-1.90]), comorbidity with mental health conditions (3.02 [1.20-7.60]) were associated with higher levels of psychological distress and fear. Doctors had higher psychological distress (1.43 [1.04-1.97]), but low levels of fear of COVID-19 (0.55 [0.41-0.76]); nurses had medium to high resilient coping (1.30 [1.03-1.65]).

Conclusions

The extent of psychological distress, fear of COVID-19 and coping varied by country; however, we identified few higher risk groups who were more vulnerable than others. There is an urgent need to prioritise health and well-being of those people through well-designed intervention that may need to be tailored to meet country specific requirements.

Details

Title
COVID-19: Factors associated with psychological distress, fear, and coping strategies among community members across 17 countries
Author
Muhammad Aziz Rahman  VIAFID ORCID Logo  ; Sheikh Mohammed Shariful Islam; Tungpunkom, Patraporn; Sultana, Farhana; Alif, Sheikh M; Banik, Biswajit; Salehin, Masudus; Bindu, Joseph; Lam, Louisa; Watts, Mimmie Claudine; Khan, Sabria Jihan; Ghozy, Sherief; Sek Ying Chair; Wai Tong Chien; Schönfeldt-Lecuona, Carlos; El-Khazragy, Nashwa; Mahmud, Ilias; Adhra Hilal Al Mawali; Turkiya Saleh Al Maskari; Alharbi, Rayan Jafnan; Hamza, Amr; Mohamad Ali Keblawi; Hammoud, Majeda; Elaidy, Asmaa M; Agus Dwi Susanto; Ahmed Suparno Bahar Moni; Alaa Ashraf AlQurashi; Almajdoub Ali; Wazib, Amit; Sanluang, Cattaliya Siripattarakul; Elsori, Deena H; Yasmin, Farhana; Taufik, Feni Fitrani; Manal Al Kloub; Ruiz, Mara Gerbabe; Elsayed, Mohamed; Nael Kamel Eltewacy; Nahed Al Laham; Oli, Natalia; Abdelnaby, Ramy; Dweik, Rania; Thongyu, Ratree; Almustanyir, Sami; Rahman, Shaila; Nitayawan, Sirirat; Al-Madhoun, Sondos; Inthong, Suwit; Talal Ali Alharbi; Bahar, Tamanna; Ginting, Tribowo Tuahta; Cross, Wendy M
Pages
1-19
Section
Research
Publication year
2021
Publication date
2021
Publisher
BioMed Central
e-ISSN
17448603
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
2583109479
Copyright
© 2021. This work is licensed under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (the “License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.