Authors
Carly A Joseph, Brendan Q O’Shea, Marisa R Eastman, Jessica M Finlay, Lindsay C Kobayashi
Publication date
2022/6
Journal
Social psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology
Volume
57
Issue
6
Pages
1273-1282
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Description
Purpose
We investigated the relationships between physical isolation at home during the period when many US states had shelter-in-place orders and subsequent longitudinal trajectories of depression, anxiety, and loneliness in older adults over a 6 month follow-up.
Methods
Data were from monthly online questionnaires with US adults aged ≥ 55 in the nation-wide COVID-19 Coping Study (April through October 2020, N = 3978). Physical isolation was defined as not leaving home except for essential purposes (0, 1–3, 4–6, and 7 days in the past week), measured at baseline (April–May). Outcomes were depressive symptoms (8-item Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale), anxiety symptoms (5-item Beck Anxiety Inventory), and loneliness (3-item UCLA loneliness scale), measured monthly (April–October). Multivariable, population- and attrition-weighted linear mixed-effects models assessed the …
Total citations
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