Attachment Style and Childhood Traumatic Experiences Moderate the Impact of Initial and Prolonged COVID-19 Pandemic: Mental Health Longitudinal Trajectories in a Sample of Italian Women.
Giovanni CastelliniLivio TarchiEmanuele CassioliEleonora RossiGiulia SanfilippoMatteo InnocentiVeronica GironiIrene ScamiValdo RiccaPublished in: International journal of mental health and addiction (2022)
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health has not been clarified yet, with multiple studies warranting a special focus on women and young adults. A sample of 101 Italian women recruited from the general population was evaluated a few weeks before the onset of the pandemic and during the first and the second wave of the pandemic. Depression values at the Brief Symptom Inventory showed an initial increase followed by a stabilization on higher values in respect to the baseline, whereas Phobic Anxiety was stably worsened. Participants with insecure attachment styles and childhood trauma showed higher levels of distress at all timepoints. In many psychopathological domains, moderation analysis showed an unfavorable trend over time for younger participants. The present study seems to confirm a high burden on mental health for women during the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting young age, insecure attachment style, and childhood trauma as negative prognostic factors.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- prognostic factors
- young adults
- pregnancy outcomes
- sars cov
- cervical cancer screening
- coronavirus disease
- depressive symptoms
- breast cancer risk
- spinal cord injury
- childhood cancer
- early life
- insulin resistance
- pregnant women
- type diabetes
- sleep quality
- middle aged
- skeletal muscle
- physical activity