US depression rate increased 300% during coronavirus pandemic
Depression rate increased from 8.5% to 27.8% between March and April
The study
conducted by JAMA Network Open, an open-access medical journal published
by the American Medical Association has found that the prevalence of symptoms
of depression in the US during the Covid-19 pandemic has increased 300%. The study clearly shows the extent to which
the health crisis could have a toll on mental health.
The study also
found that people with lower incomes and those exposed to more Covid-19-related
stressors were more likely to report depression symptoms than others.
A survey
before the pandemic involving nearly 5,000 American adults found that 8.5 per
cent of them showed signs of depression such as feeling down or hopeless, low
energy, trouble concentrating, or thinking about self-harm.
However,
this number rose to 27.8pc when researchers surveyed almost 1,500 American
adults about their mental health from March to April of this year. Even more
people almost an additional 25% showed
milder signs of depression.
The findings
suggest that "there is a high burden of depression symptoms in the US
associated with the Covid-19 pandemic and that this burden falls
disproportionately on individuals who are already at increased risk,"
researchers said.
Women were more
likely to experience depression than men, and single people were more likely to
suffer depression than married couples. Additionally, having less than $5,000
in household savings was associated with a 50% greater risk of experiencing
depression symptoms, according to the study.
The research
found the increase in depression symptom prevalence to be higher than that
recorded after previous mass traumatic events, likely reflecting "the far
more pervasive influence of Covid-19 and its social and economic consequences".
Britain is
also experiencing the same phenomenon. Britain's Office for National Statistics
said 19pc of adults reported some form of depression during June, compared with
10pc in the nine months before March 2020. Stress and anxiety were the most
common types of depression listed by people, it reported.
Rukhsana Manzoor Deputy Editor
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