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A longitudinal examination of the protective effect of resilience against anxiety among older adults with high COVID-related worry.

Dawn Celeste CarrJulia L ShefflerMelissa MeynadasyNorman Brad SchmidtGreg HajcakNatalie Sachs-Ericsson
Published in: Cognitive behaviour therapy (2023)
This longitudinal study of community dwelling older adults ( N  = 453) examined consequences of COVID-related worries on changes in anxiety symptoms before relative to during the pandemic. We further evaluated if pre-COVID psychological resilience (PR) buffered the impact of COVID-related worry. Pre-COVID data were collected in September 2018. COVID-related worry and COVID anxiety symptoms were collected in October 2020 (Wave 2). Controlling for pre-COVID anxiety symptoms, we examined if COVID-related worries (e.g. I'm worried that I might die from COVID-19) were associated with increased anxiety symptoms, and whether pre-COVID PR moderated the association between COVID-related worries and prospective increases in anxiety symptoms. COVID-related worries were associated with increased anxiety symptoms (β = 0.005, p  < .01), whereas pre-COVID PR was associated with a decrease in anxiety symptoms (β = -0.029, p  < .05). PR moderated the association; COVID-related worries were associated with greater increases in anxiety symptoms among those with low pre-COVID PR (Model η 2  = 0.35). Thus, the extent to which COVID-related worries influenced psychological health was dependent on pre-COVID levels of PR. We conclude the combined vulnerabilities of low pre-COVID PR and high COVID-related worries significantly increased the psychological consequences of COVID-19 for our sample of older adults.
Keyphrases
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • sleep quality
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • public health
  • physical activity
  • mental health
  • risk assessment
  • social media
  • depressive symptoms
  • human health