Psychological problems and reduced health-related quality of life in the COVID-19 survivors

•COVID-19 would have mental health sequelae in a group of survivors.•Female survivors are probably more vulnerable to COVID-19 mental health sequelae.•COVID-19 survivors are at risk of a reduced HRQoL one month beyond the acute phase. COVID-19 survivors are predicted to experience the long-term cons...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of affective disorders reports 2021-12, Vol.6, p.100248-100248, Article 100248
Hauptverfasser: Dorri, Mahya, Mozafari Bazargany, Mohamad Hossein, Khodaparast, Zeinab, Bahrami, Soroush, Seifi Alan, Mahnaz, Rahimi, Fariba, Kamipoor, Zeinab, Niksima, Mohammad Mahdi, Dehghan, Hanieh, Rastad, Hadis
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•COVID-19 would have mental health sequelae in a group of survivors.•Female survivors are probably more vulnerable to COVID-19 mental health sequelae.•COVID-19 survivors are at risk of a reduced HRQoL one month beyond the acute phase. COVID-19 survivors are predicted to experience the long-term consequences, including pulmonary, neurologic, cardiovascular, and mental health sequelae. This systematic review and meta-analysis was performed on studies assessing the health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and psychiatric problems in COVID-19 survivors. A systematic search was performed on PubMed, Embase, and Google scholar databases using key terms COVID-19, PTSD, depression, anxiety, HRQoL, survivors. Pooled estimates were calculated using the random-effects models. A total of 21 eligible articles were included. The pooled prevalence of PTSD, depression, and anxiety among COVID‐19 survivors were 18% (95% CI: 13 to 23%, I2=88.23%), 12% (8 to 17%, I2=91.84%), and 17% (12 to 22%, I2=97.07%), respectively. COVID‐19 survivors compared to pre-COVID-19 time and controls showed reduced HRQoL and a lower score in Social Functioning (SF) and Role Physical (RP), and Role Emotional (RE) health. Females compared to males had a higher risk of experiencing mental health problems. Also, patients with severe disease had a higher prevalence of depression and anxiety, but not PTSD. Regarding HRQoL, we were not able to perform a subgroup analysis due to a lack of data. Also, the included studies mainly used a self-rating scale to detect psychological problems in their study population. A significant number of patients who survived from COVID-19 might suffer from PTSD, depression, and anxiety beyond one month. Our systematic review also found evidence of reduced HQOL and limited social role in these survivors
ISSN:2666-9153
2666-9153
DOI:10.1016/j.jadr.2021.100248