key: cord-0688220-lg9wlonr authors: Bloch, Yuval; Shemesh, Sharon; Grossman-Giron, Ariella; Maoz, Hagai; Cohenmehr, Erica; Hertzberg, Libi; Nitzan, Uri; Tsur-Bitan, Dana title: Buffering effect of in-patient psychiatric care on the link between fear of covid-19 and mental health consequences date: 2022-02-01 journal: Psychiatry Res Commun DOI: 10.1016/j.psycom.2022.100027 sha: c1ebd2f40440df85a9e73ca6883d20fd9d212b80 doc_id: 688220 cord_uid: lg9wlonr BACKGROUND& AIMES: Psychiatric admissions during the covid-19 pandemic were limited ignoring their possible benefit. The study focused on assessing the effect of the fear of covid on the mental health and well-being of inpatients as opposed to outpatients. METHODS: During the first lockdown, forty-four inpatients and day care patients (inpatient group) and 74 outpatients (outpatient group) were recruited after an informed consent procedure. Fear from the infection was assed using the Fear of COVID-19 (FCV–19S), severity of mental health symptomatology was evaluated with the outcome questionnaire-45 (OQ-45)., wellbeing was assessed with the Psychological well-being scale (PWB). OUTCOMES: There was no difference between the inpatient group and outpatient group in their fear of COVID-19 levels. FCV-19 predicted changes in the outpatient OQ total score (B = 2.21, p < 0.001), OQ interpersonal relation subscale (B = 0.34, p = 0.01), PWB total score (B = −0.05, p < 0.001), PWB environmental mastery subscale (B = −0.07, p < 0.001) and PWB positive relation subscale (B = −0.05, p < 0.001), but not in the inpatient group. CONCLUSIONS: Mental health and well-being of the outpatient group that had less therapeutic contact –unlike the inpatient group-correlated with the fear of covid. Supporting the hypothesis that intensive psychiatric therapy had a protective effect from the mental health consequences of “fear of covid”. Mental health of psychiatric patients during the pandemic The current pandemic is an unprecedented global crisis, affecting the mental health and wellbeing of the general population worldwide (1) . The combination of the "fear of covid-19" and its related consequences, such as the demand for social distancing, are recognized as significant stressors (1) . Researchers have argued that patients in need of psychiatric care prior to the pandemic raise special concerns (2) . The literature from past disasters and catastrophes indicates that an unpredictable response may be expected of severely mentally ill patients. For example, one week after a high magnitude tsunami in Japan on March 11, 2011 and a subsequent explosion at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant, researchers found that there was no symptomatic change in the condition of two thirds of the psychiatric inpatients, and there were even some patients with improvement (3) . Nonetheless, preliminary evidence from the current pandemic indicates that the fear of covid-19 among patients with previous mental health disorders may be at least as severe as in the general population (3) (4) (5) . Many people with mental health difficulties share the suggested risk factors found in the general population for having a higher risk for mental illness, including: lower socioeconomic condition, poor coping mechanisms, poor social support, and having higher measures of hostility towards others (6) . Psychiatric care is considered imperative in treating people with mental illness, especially in times of crisis. In the pre-covid-19 era, routine psychiatric care was largely based on direct social contacts (7) . Direct social contacts are relevant to all forms of psychiatric care, including psychiatric evaluations, psychiatric follow-ups and psychotherapy. Previously, there was only very limited use of telepsychiatry, and direct personal contact was considered by many a hallmark of psychiatric therapy (2) . Close social interactions also play a large part in treatment on inpatient J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f wards and partial hospitalization programs. They include recurring meetings with various staff members, group sessions, and a "therapeutic socially active environment", characterized by shared meals and numerous informal interactions (7) . Despite the importance of close social interaction in psychiatric treatment, findings have demonstrated that this type of proximity during psychiatric hospitalizations poses a risk for spreadinginfection, specifically covid-19 (8) . Reports of in-ward contamination and consequent fatalities have been published worldwide (9) . Thus, as the pandemic progresses, reports indicate a decline in psychiatric admissions and inpatient care, while patients are discharged as early as possible and the decision to sustain intensive psychiatric care is based on the level of immediate risk to self or others (10, 11) . Previous researchers have shared their experience and knowledge of caring for patients in this context, aiming at minimizing the spread of infection under these circumstances (7, 8, 12) . In order to guide clinicians and policy makers about the multifaceted consequences of psychiatric hospitalization during the pandemic, it is crucial to assess not only the risks, but also the potential mental health benefits. To quantitate gains of complex interventions such as psychiatric hospitalization or partial hospitalization is an extremely challenging task, as it necessitates the use of an accepted outcome measure, in naturalistic settings, whilst partaking in numerous trans-diagnostic interventions, with various possible biological and psychosocial confounding variables. However, the task of elucidating the effect of inpatient psychiatry in the context of the current pandemic is essential, and many questions remain unanswered. For example, thus far, it is not clear if the more severely ill patients that required hospitalization during the pandemic suffer from "fear of covid-19" to the same extent as less severely ill patients who require only outpatient therapy. In the current study, we aimed to assess fear of COVID-19, symptomatic distress levels, and wellbeing among inpatients and outpatients during the first lockdown at Shalvata Mental Health Center in Israel. Based on recent literature demonstrating that the fear of covid-19 among psychiatric patients is as severe as in the general population (3) (4) (5) , we hypothesized that both groups would exhibit similar levels of "fear of covid-19". Moreover, seeing that the fear itself has been shown to have detrimental effects on symptomatology and wellbeing of different J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f patient groups (3, 4, 13) , our second hypothesis was that inpatients would be unaffected by the determinate effects of the fear of covid-19 on mental health and wellbeing. This presumed protective effect would emerge beyond the effect of possible differences between the groups studied such as symptomatic severity and the presence of psychosis. The study was approved by the Shalvata Mental Health Center institutional review board (IRB, approval number: 007-20-SHA). All research was performed in accordance with relevant guidelines/regulations. All participants were recruited between April 26th and June 6th of 2020, a short time after a general COVID-19 pandemic lockdown was mandated in Israel. The regulations had a profound effect on mental health services. They included discharging patients to less intense therapy when possible and limiting guest visits on inpatient wards. However, inpatients continued to receive regular therapeutic interventions. These included psychotherapeutic sessions and follow-up twice a week at minimum, daily encounters with psychiatric nurses and supportive staff, daily occupational therapist sessions, group sessions several times per week as well as various informal interactions in the mileu. As opposed to inpatient care, outpatients had very few frontal, direct encounters with their therapists. Most follow-ups and therapeutic sessions were conducted using telepsychiatry, which for most patients occurred less than once a week. Many interactions were conducted by phone calls due to limited access to secured video conferences. Study recruitment concluded at the beginning of June because many of the strict lockdown regulations had been lifted at that time, and with that, the atmosphere surrounding covid-19 had shifted. Inclusion criteria for inpatient group consisted of being an inpatient or day-treatment patient and being able to cooperate in the questionnaire assessment. Inclusion criteria for the J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f outpatient group was being an outpatient at the time of the study with consultations occurring up to weekly (usually less). Participants were recruited via publications that were distributed to both staff and patients in the different inpatient units at Shalvata Mental Health Center. Forty-four participants were recruited for the inpatient and day patient group. They were recruited from 3 inpatient wards and one outpatient ward. There was a total of 217 patients in the 4 units during the relevant time. Participants who had agreed to take part in the study were asked to sign informed consent and to fill out a hard copy of the study questionnaires. For simplicity, this will be referred to as the inpatient group (including both inpatients and day program patients). Seventy-four outpatients were recruited for the outpatient group. Beyond written communication with outpatients, 120 patients participating in a former study assessing the effect of process and outcome feedback in distressed outpatients were contacted again for recruitment to the current study. After signing an online informed consent, outpatient respondents performed an online version of the same survey given to the inpatient participants using an online data gathering software (Qualtrics). The mean age of the 128 patients was 36.5 (SD=13.76). 60.2% were men and 39.8% were women. The Outcome Questionnaire-45 (OQ-45): A commonly used, well-validated and reliable selfreport questionnaire. It is used to assess patient outcomes over the course of psychotherapy. This measure aims at a comprehensive trans-diagnostic assessment of the patients' clinical condition. It consists of 45 items, evaluating three different dimensions: (a) symptom distress, (b) interpersonal relationships, and (c) social role performance. While the total score range is 0-180, the cutoff score between clinical and nonclinical populations is 63 (14, 15) . Psychological well-being scale (PWB): A self-report questionnaire created for the purpose of evaluating six elements of psychological well-being: personal growth, purpose in life, self-J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f acceptance, environmental mastery, positive relations with others, and autonomy. Answers are given on a 6-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 6 (strongly agree). A mean score is calculated for each dimension of well-being, with higher scores indicating higher wellbeing in all domains. Previous studies among psychiatric outpatients have shown that this scale is sensitive to changes in well-being. For the purpose of the current study, we utilized the total score of the PWB, as well as the personal growth, purpose-in-life, and self-acceptance factors. The alpha coefficient of the PWB in the current sample indicated high internal reliability (Cronbach's alpha = .95) (16) . Fear of COVID-19 (FCV-19S): A self-report scale designed to measure fear of COVID-19 (17) . The questionnaire consists of 7 items describing pandemic-related emotional fear reactions. Items are rated on a five-item Likert-type scale ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree) and a total sum score is calculated. The total scale range is 7-35, with higher scores demonstrating higher fear of COVID-19. This scale recently showed good psychometric properties in an Israeli sample (18). The alpha coefficient of the FCV-19S in the current sample indicated high internal reliability (Cronbach's alpha = .91). Demographic and clinical differences between the inpatient and outpatient groups were assessed using a chi square test for categorical variables (sex) and t-test for continuous variables (table 1&2) . In order to assess the moderating effect of being an inpatient or outpatient on the association between fear of COVID-19 (FCV) and clinical severity and psychological well-being (as represented in the OQ-45 and PWB subscales), we first performed test of normality on all outcome measures. The Hayes process script was then used to assess the moderating effect of the group on the predictive effect of fear of COVID-19 on the OQ-45 and PWB total scores and subscales (19) . To substantiate our findings, we controlled for covariates that differed between the two groups. All statistical procedures were conducted using SPSS version 25. Comparison of the two patient groups The study groups were compared to evaluate differences in possible confounders. Significant differences were found in gender, marital status, education, and diagnosis (nonpsychotic or psychotic, including schizophrenia bipolar and psychotic depression). (Table 1) There was no difference in fear of COVID-19 between the inpatient group and outpatient group. The groups differed in OQ-45 total score as well as in all its three subscales: symptom distress, interpersonal relations, and social role, indicating that the inpatient group reported generally higher distress levels (t(114)=3.28, p≤0.05), more subjective discomfort (symptom distress subscale; t(114)=3.31, p<0.01), more loneliness and involvement in interpersonal conflicts The results of our study support our first hypothesis, that the inpatient and care group would suffer from similar level of "fear of covid" as the outpatient group. While the groups differ in mental health and wellbeing, they do not differ in their level of fear of the pandemic. As expected, the reaction to this significant stressor is fear. To an extent, "fear of covid-19" is a "normative response" reported in the general population-not only in both study patient groups, but also in the general population in health professionals and different patient groups across countries (1, 20, 21) . Previous studies have focused on the prevalence of mental health symptoms during the pandemic in different groups (3, 4, 22) . In this respect, it appears that patients who have previous mental health difficulties are more vulnerable to the mental health consequences of the "fear of covid-19" (3-5). These findings point to the current condition, but they cannot help in evaluating the causes of the mental health difficulties. While some arise from the mental burden posed by the fear itself, difficulties related to the current economic circumstances or the threat to physical health are indistinguishable. A more precise understanding of the course of mental health deterioration is important because if the reasons are related directly to economic circumstances, they will likely demand different interventions. Some studies focused on evaluating the "fear of covid-19" itself (17, 18) . The presence of fear is important, as it helpsconceptualize the "fear of covid" as a stressor, but has limited immediate clinical relevance. As mental health professionals and researchers in the field, we are interested in not just the presence of the "fear of covid-19" or in the presence of mental health symptoms and effects on wellbeing, but further, in a better understanding of the connection between them. In the current study we aimed to understand the burden of the perceived "fear of covid" on mental health and wellbeing of our patients, and attempted to study the protective effect of being an inpatient or participating in a day-care psychiatric program. With the limitations of a cross sectional study, we used the correlation between "fear of covid-19" and patients'mental health symptomatology and wellbeing. In this sense, our findings in the outpatient group of the current study support the connection between the "fear of covid-19" and both mental health and psychological wellbeing. This probably points J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f to the "fear of covid-19" itself, or to the ability to cope with this fear as therapeutic hubs-that need to be tackled even during the pandemic. In the setting of a pandemic, treating psychiatric patients, especially those who necessitate more intensive treatment, poses a challenge due to the risk of spreading disease and endangering patients' physical health (9, 10, 23) . Based on these dangers, actual therapeutic encounters were generally minimized in the face of the pandemic, and psychiatric inpatient therapy, day therapy, and all forms of intensive therapy were extremely limited (9, 10). Thus, not surprisingly, in the current study, the inpatients had more psychiatric symptomatology (as reflected by results of the OQ) and worse well-being (as reflected by results of the PWB). Our second aim was to study the protective effect of inpatient or day-care psychiatric admissions on the effect of "fear of covid-19" on mental health and psychological well-being. Unlike the outpatients, mental health and psychological well-being of the inpatients did not correlate with the "fear of covid-19". This supports a protective effect of the inpatient setting from the mental health consequences of the "fear of covid-19". The presented uncontrolled study cannot answer what contributes to the protective effect from "fear of covid" in the inpatient and daycare group. There are a few possible explanations. 1. The intensity of the therapeutic encounters the inpatient daycare group received, which was at a different level than the outpatient group (several encounters per day as opposed to a single encounter per week or less). This possibility is supported by a line of studies that stress the role of intensive psychotherapy in complex psychiatry patients in general (unrelated to the pandemic). This has been exemplified in patients with treatment resistant depression (24) and in patients with severe mental disorders (25). 2. The fact that the encounters were frontal as opposed to mainly distant (online) encounters for the outpatient group may explain the protective effect. This possibility is supported intuitively, but the evidence does not support this possibility (26). 3. The possibility that it is the general human contact and feeling of belonging that protects us from the detrimental effects of fear. It seems that the evolving awareness to the connection between loneliness and mental health risks is in line with this possibility (27, 28) . In accordance with this line of thought, recent studies have aimed at linking risk and protective factors in assessing prospectively the mental health outcome of the pandemic (6, 29) . Duan et al. studied the general population and conducted two evaluations, one at the peak, and a second at the remission of the covid-19 pandemic. They pointed to social support as a "buffer" or a resilient factor, protecting from the malicious cascade from stress to depression (6) . The fact that there was no difference in the level of "fear of covid-19" between the inpatients and outpatients in the current study can support this "buffer hypothesis". Duan et al. found that an increased level of perceived stress was a risk factor for worse outcome, and the use of negative coping strategies played a potential mediating role in the deterioration. In a longitudinal assessment of participants from the community, Schafer et al. demonstrated that low "sense of coherence" before the pandemic was a risk factor for the development of mental health symptoms during the pandemic (29) . Using other evaluation tools (OQ-45), the inpatient group in the current study was found to have higher distress levels, more subjective discomfort, more loneliness and involvement in interpersonal conflicts, and (PWB) less sense of environmental mastery, less positive relation and less self-acceptance. All these would be considered risk factors for the effects of the fear-possibly stressing the importance of being in in patient or daycare psychiatric therapy as a protective factor for mental health consequences. The decision to treat patients, especially when treatment entails close encounters with therapists and other patients as in the inpatient or day care setting, cannot be taken lightly in the throes of a pandemic. There are current reports on a decline in the use of psychiatric services referrals and admissions during the lockdown weeks at the beginning of the pandemic (10, 11) . Psychiatrists and therapists during the pandemic have focused on the physical dangers and possibly neglected possible mental health consequences. This is understandable because the field did not have data about possible benefits of therapy during these troubling times. Due to the risk of contamination, it is important to study and quantify mental health benefits of therapy in these unique circumstances. In the current study, we were able to point to a possible protective effect of the inpatient and daytherapy on the immediate detrimental mental health effects and psychological well-being effects of the fear of Covid. The inpatient setting could not protect from the fear itself, but our results J o u r n a l P r e -p r o o f support the ability to dissociate the fear from its dangerous mental health consequences at least during the first wave of the pandemic. Study limitations include the methodology of a naturalistic study. There was no randomization between the study groups. It seems that a randomized controlled study would be considered unethical. Our analysis attempted to tackle this problem by examining the significant clinical differences between the two patient groups as co-variants in the moderation analysis. Another limitation is the small group size and the patients' heterogeneity in diagnosis and disease severity. This limitation can be tackled by future larger scale studies-and in this respect our findings are probably a call for the importance in conducting such large scale studies. Probably the most important limitation relates to the cross sectional immediate effects. 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