학술논문
Factors associated with anxiety during the first two years of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States: An analysis of the COVID-19 Citizen Science study.
Document Type
article
Author
Cozen, Aaron E; Carton, Thomas; Hamad, Rita; Kornak, John; Faulkner Modrow, Madelaine; Peyser, Noah D; Park, Soo; Orozco, Jaime H; Brandner, Matthew; O'Brien, Emily C; Djibo, Djeneba Audrey; McMahill-Walraven, Cheryl N; Isasi, Carmen R; Beatty, Alexis L; Olgin, Jeffrey E; Marcus, Gregory M; Pletcher, Mark J
Source
PLOS ONE. 19(2)
Subject
Language
Abstract
COVID-19 increased the prevalence of clinically significant anxiety in the United States. To investigate contributing factors we analyzed anxiety, reported online via monthly Generalized Anxiety Disorders-7 (GAD-7) surveys between April 2020 and May 2022, in association with self-reported worry about the health effects of COVID-19, economic difficulty, personal COVID-19 experience, and subjective social status. 333,292 anxiety surveys from 50,172 participants (82% non-Hispanic white; 73% female; median age 55, IQR 42-66) showed high levels of anxiety, especially early in the pandemic. Anxiety scores showed strong independent associations with worry about the health effects of COVID-19 for oneself or family members (GAD-7 score +3.28 for highest vs. lowest category; 95% confidence interval: 3.24, 3.33; p