key: cord-0753604-10nt3sss authors: Ellwardt, Lea; Präg, Patrick title: Heterogeneous mental health development during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom date: 2021-08-05 journal: Sci Rep DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-95490-w sha: fa20f7c796af53a2b70725424364e5989ae1096f doc_id: 753604 cord_uid: 10nt3sss The COVID-19 pandemic and the mitigation measures by governments have upended the economic and social lives of many, leading to widespread psychological distress. We explore heterogeneity in trajectories of psychological distress during the pandemic in the United Kingdom and relate this heterogeneity to socio-demographic and health factors. We analyze nine waves of longitudinal, nationally representative survey data from the UK Household Longitudinal Study ([Formula: see text] ), covering the period from early 2020 to mid-2021. First, latent class mixture modelling is used to identify trajectories of psychological distress. Second, associations of the trajectories with covariates are tested with multinomial logistic regressions. We find four different trajectories of distress: continuously low, temporarily elevated, repeatedly elevated, and continuously elevated distress. Nearly two fifths of the population experienced severely elevated risks of distress during the pandemic. Long-term distress was highest among younger people, women, people living without a partner, those who had no work or lost income, and those with previous health conditions or COVID-19 symptoms. Given the threat of persistent stress on health, policy measures should be sensitized to the unintended yet far-reaching consequences of non-pharmaceutical interventions. | (2021) 11:15958 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-95490-w www.nature.com/scientificreports/ gradually eased until July 4 when most businesses were allowed to open again. From late July onwards, a series of limited and often local restrictions was put in place. From November 5, England went into a second, 4-week long lockdown, which differed from the first in that schools and universities remained open, and from December onwards returned to a system of local restrictions. In early January 2021, the United Kingdom went into a third lockdown that ended gradually: in March, schools reopened, in April, individuals in groups of up to six were allowed to meet again outdoors, outdoor pubs, restaurants and non-essential shops reopened in England, in mid-May 2021, outdoor social contact became unregulated again, individuals in groups of up to six were allowed to meet indoors, and restaurants and hotels could re-open. Ignoring the existence of simultaneous yet distinct trajectories in coping with the lockdown likely obscures important differences across subpopulations. Previous research has shown, for example, that disadvantaged social groups are more vulnerable to stressors, have worse mental and physical health, and are less resilient to adverse life events than advantaged groups 19 . Likewise, the unique case of repeated lockdowns imposed increased informal care responsibilities on women [20] [21] [22] [23] and heightened risks of loneliness for people living alone 24, 25 . Trajectories were retrieved from a time series of mental health data covering the period before, during, and after the three lockdowns in the United Kingdom. In our analyses we, first, employed latent class mixture modelling (LCCM) 26 to estimate trajectories of change in psychological distress. This data-reduction technique classifies individuals within a population and probabilistically assigns them into latent classes. Each class represents a distinct subpopulation of individuals with highly similar trajectories. Second, using multinomial logistic regression, we examined factors associated with the different trajectories. Our study extends a recent study 6 with a similar analytical approach of the same data and similar findings by extending the observation window. Pierce et al. 6 restricted their analyses to the period until September 2020, we add three additional waves of data until May 2021. Development of psychological distress followed four distinct trajectories, as revealed by the latent class mixture models. The model fit levelled off for greater numbers of trajectories, i.e., the log-likelihood based statistics 27 improved only slightly in the five-trajectory solution, as seen in Table 1 . The five-trajectory solution was still well-fitted, but generated two highly similar trajectories in the first half of the observation window, and three highly similar trajectories in the second half. The model with four trajectories was therefore more parsimonious and expedient in its further interpretation. The four psychological distress trajectories are visualized in Fig. 1 . Continuously low (trajectory 1): The largest group included half of the participants (53.2%), whose likelihood of psychological distress remained permanently close to zero. Temporarily elevated (trajectory 2): The smallest group contained 8.0% of the participants, who started out with a rather low likelihood of distress, comparable to those in trajectory 1. Crucially, risk of psychological distress rapidly rose to two thirds at the beginning of the pandemic. This stark elevation was of temporal nature, as distress recovered quickly back to zero after the first lockdown and remained stably low thereafter. Repeatedly elevated (trajectory 3): The second-largest group comprised one fourth of the participants (24.0%). Their likelihood of psychological distress was roughly one third at the start and peaked during all periods of lockdown, reaching its maximum of one half in the third lockdown. Continuously elevated (trajectory 4): The third-largest group comprised of 14.8% of the participants, who had a consistently high likelihood of psychological distress, with the vast majority of the individuals reporting distress at all time points. Yet, also in this trajectory, mental health covaried with the start of the pandemic. The likelihood of distress reached a near-maximum during the first lockdown and slightly declined thereafter, however, without returning to its initial level. Taking trajectories 3 and 4 together, about two fifths of the population experienced a significant and severe elevation of psychological distress during the whole observation period. To examine whether socio-demographic and health variables are associated with being on the four trajectories, individuals were discretely assigned to the latent trajectory with the highest posterior probability. Higher means of this probability in a trajectory indicate greater certainty in the assignment procedure. Mean probabilities ranged from .69 for trajectory 2 to .89 for trajectory 1. Table 2 presents the distribution of the covariates across trajectories. The assigned trajectories served as the outcome in a multinomial logistic regression model. The association of the covariates with each of the four trajectories are expressed as average marginal effects (AMEs) shown in Fig. 2 . AMEs reflect the average change in a trajectory's probability when a covariate increases by one unit. The following focuses on changes in mental health, thus on individuals with elevated stress levels in trajectories 2 to 4. The risk of experiencing any of these trajectories was highest for young and female individuals and those reporting COVID-19 symptoms. Repeated distress was more probable for people living with children in the household. Furthermore, the risk for continued distress was highest for individuals who lived without a partner, had not worked before the pandemic, mentioned pre-pandemic health conditions, and lost substantial income www.nature.com/scientificreports/ during the course of the pandemic. For the latter sub-populations, the initial probability of 14.8% in trajectory 4 shifted upwards by another 1.8 to 12.2 percentage points (e.g., income loss was associated with a total risk of 16.6% and being aged 24 years or younger had an adjusted risk of 27.0%). This implied a strong impact of some of these covariates on developing continuously elevated psychological distress. The unparalleled shock of the COVID-19 pandemic has provoked a natural stress test for entire societies. We took a perspective similar to those of policy makers and stakeholders by describing which trajectories of psychological distress occurred in the United Kingdom. We next described the most affected subpopulation in terms of socio-demographic profiles, rather than single out presumably vulnerable subpopulations for inspection a priori. Our results replicate and extend the findings by Pierce et al. 6 , who used a similar model and the same data to study the first lockdown in the UK. Their findings revealed comparable trajectories to ours, with one main nuance: The continuously low-distress group was refined into two subgroups ('consistently good' and 'consistently very good' mental health), because the authors used a mean GHQ-score instead of a dichotomous cut-off for distress. In contrast to Proto and Quintana-Domeque 11 , we did not find an average increase in psychological distress for the whole UK sample. However, their study covered changes between pre-COVID-19 and April 2020 only, i.e., the first two measurements in our study design. This snapshot could not capture short-term hiccups in distress that bounced back after the lockdown, as identified in trajectory 2. But even though in our study the majority either proved resilient or recovered quickly, two in five individuals suffered from psychological distress until after the observation period. This vulnerable group was not solely defined by the usual risk factors of poor health. These findings closely resemble previous findings from the UK, where one out of four individuals reported depressive symptoms and one out of five individuals suffered from anxiety 4,6 . Using the same data as in our study and group-based latent growth mixture models on depressive symptoms, an outcome closely related to our measure of psychological distress, Iob et al. 28 found three latent trajectories. These included low (60%), moderate (29%) and severe (11%) depressive symptoms during lockdown. As in previous research, in our study risks were greater for those who are younger, female 6, 29 , individuals living without a partner 1,5 , individuals with COVID-19-related symptoms 12, 30 , and those who lost income [31] [32] [33] . Crucially, individuals who fail to buffer the long-term exposure of distress are vulnerable to a variety of negative health outcomes, including poor physical health, morbidity, and mortality 19, 34 . More dramatically, chronic psychological stress has been related to lower immunity and, as a result, higher susceptibility of the common cold, influenza, infectious diseases and upper respiratory illness 35 www.nature.com/scientificreports/ among the broader public, and thereby backfire on a large scale. Distress might at least partly offset beneficial health consequences of governmental measures 36 . Reducing distress should therefore be key in policy-making aiming to safeguard public health, and even more so during repeated lockdowns that accumulate stressors into constant emotional exhaustion. In our analysis, particularly women and those living with children were prone to a peak of distress during the third lockdown. Mounting challenges of orchestrating family care and homeschooling duties likely helped pave this way. A limitation of the present study was the use of self-reported psychological distress. The pandemic is still ongoing, and the months and years to come will show whether deterioration in mental health manifests into heightened therapeutic need and psychiatric intervention, or whether societies put this collective trauma behind. Moreover, the development of psychological distress may be investigated in combination with correlated health variables, such as drinking behavior, through modelling joint trajectories. The heterogeneity in the development of mental health during the pandemic emphasizes peoples' idiosyncrasy in responses to extreme changes. Likewise, policy-makers will need to be careful in identifying and supporting groups at risk. Addressed health risks should not merely prioritize physical outcomes directly related to the COVID-19 disease, but include longer-term consequences in the domain of mental and social well-being of the general public 2 . We analyze data from the Understanding Society COVID-19 Study 37, 38 . The UK Household Longitudinal Study "Understanding Society" is a long-running, nationally representative panel survey that annually interviews those members 16 years or older of participating households. During the COVID-19 pandemic, additional monthly online and phone interviews were conducted in April, May, June, July, September, and November 2020 as well as in January and May 2021. The University of Essex Ethics Committee approved the data collection and informed consent was obtained from all participants. No ethics approval was necessary for this secondary data analysis. All experiments were performed in accordance with relevant guidelines and regulations. The analytical sample is restricted to 15,914 participants with information on psychological distress for a minimum of three waves. This is to increase validity in the modelling of the participants' trajectories. Psychological distress is measured with the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12) 39 . Participants are presented with twelve questions (e.g. "Have you recently been feeling unhappy or depressed?"), and those who respond "Much more than usual" or "Rather more than usual" receive a score of 1, while those responding "No more than usual" or "Not at all" receive a score of 0 (the so-called "caseness" scoring). Summated scores of four or more (out of twelve) are usually considered as distressed. As done in previous research 40 , we dichotomized scores accordingly into presence (1) versus absence (0) of psychological distress in every of the nine measurement waves. Covariates included dummy variables for the countries Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland (England was the reference category), age (24 years and younger, 25-44 years, 45-64 years, 65 years and older), gender ( female = 1 vs. male = 0 ), race ( Non-White = 1 vs. White = 0 ), and living with partner ( yes = 1 vs. no = 0 ). Further, social class was accounted for based on a collapsed version of the NS-SEC social class scheme (working class, intermediate, professional) 41 , an established measure of social class in the United Kingdom 42 and a known predictor of mental health 4344 . Monthly earnings (log-transformed and mean-imputed), a dummy variable indicating an income loss of 15% or more during the pandemic, and two dummy variables to adjust for missing values in the previous earnings variables were also included in the models. Other socio-demographic covariates regarded sharing the household with one or more children aged under 19 years, being a single parent (composed from the aforementioned partner and child variables), being employed or self-employed (all: yes = 1 vs. no = 1 ). Health covariates concerned having had symptoms of COVID-19 and mentioning any diagnosed health conditions (both: yes = 1 vs. no = 0 ). All covariates stemmed from baseline of the COVID-19 study module, April 2020. Because we had no a priori expectations of specific distributions, we opted for an explorative approach to determine number and prevalence of trajectories, using the nine repeated measurements of psychological distress. Mixture models for the clustering of longitudinal data series identify latent subpopulations that share similar trajectories 27 . These trajectories, which are highly comparable within subpopulations, are deemed mutually exclusive between subpopulations. To determine the number of distinct trajectories, we first estimated a set of models for a varying number of k trajectories, starting with k = 1 , and sequentially increasing k by one, until the model fit leveled off or deteriorated. Second, we proceeded with the model with the best fit to investigate associations of covariates with each of the k trajectories. Specifically, a participant's trajectory with the highest probability served as the categorical outcome in a multinomial logit model. The sample in this model was reduced to participants with complete covariates. We show average marginal effects (AMEs), which reflect the average change in a trajectory's probability when a covariate increases by one unit. The statistical analysis was performed in Stata 17 using the command 'traj' (version May 17, 2020) for estimating group-based trajectory models 45 . The data analyzed in this study are publicly available from the UK Data Service 37 to registered users and a replication package for all analyses shown is available online 46 . Trajectories of anxiety and depressive symptoms during enforced isolation due to COVID-19 in England: A longitudinal observational study Multidisciplinary research priorities for the COVID-19 pandemic: A call for action for mental health science Psychological distress among people with probable COVID-19 infection: Analysis of the UK Household Longitudinal Study Mental health and wellbeing during the COVID-19 pandemic: Longitudinal analyses of adults in the UK COVID-19 Mental Health and Wellbeing Study Mental health before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: A longitudinal probability sample survey of the UK population Mental health responses to the COVID-19 pandemic: A latent class trajectory analysis using longitudinal UK data Psychological distress and loneliness reported by US adults Lifestyle and mental health disruptions during COVID-19 Cross-country differences in anxiety and behavioral response to the COVID-19 pandemic The unexpected decline in feelings of depression among adults aged 50 and older in eleven European countries amidst the COVID-19 pandemic COVID-19 and mental health deterioration by ethnicity and gender in the UK The mental health impact of COVID-19 and lockdown-related stressors among adults in the UK Who is most affected by the corona crisis? An analysis of changes in stress and wellbeing in Switzerland Searching for comfort in religion: insecurity and religious behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic in Italy Fare differently, feel differently: mental well-being of UK-born and foreign-born working men during the COVID-19 pandemic The Opportunity insights team. The economic impacts of COVID-19: evidence from a new public database built using private sector data COVID-19, social class, and work experience in Germany: Inequalities in work-related health and economic risks Economic hardship and mental health complaints during COVID-19 Stress and health: Major findings and policy implications The impact of COVID-19 on the gender division of childcare work in Hungary The COVID-19 pandemic and subjective wellbeing: Longitudinal evidence on satisfaction with work and family Changes in employment and relationship satisfaction in times of the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence from the German family panel Who cares when care closes? Care arrangements and parental working conditions during the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany Loneliness and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: A study among Dutch older adults Students under lockdown: Comparisons of students' social networks and mental health before and during the COVID-19 crisis in Switzerland Latent Class and Latent Transition Analysis An overview of mixture modeling for latent evolutions in longitudinal data: Modeling approaches, fit statistics, and software Levels of severity of depressive symptoms among at-risk groups in the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic The mental health effects of the first two months of lockdown during the COVID-19 pandemic in the UK. Fiscal Stud Prevalence and predictors of general psychiatric disorders and loneliness during COVID-19 in the United Kingdom Who is lonely in lockdown? Cross-cohort analyses of predictors of loneliness before and during the COVID-19 pandemic Loneliness during a strict lockdown: Trajectories and predictors during the COVID-19 pandemic in 38,217 United Kingdom adults Does thinking make it so? Differential associations between adversity worries and experiences and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic The effect of psychological distress on health outcomes: A systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective studies Psychological stress and susceptibility to the common cold The effects of non-pharmaceutical interventions on COVID-19-related mortality: A generalized synthetic control approach across 169 countries Understanding Society: COVID-19 Study 2020-21 Understanding society at ten years The Detection of Psychiatric Illness by Questionnaire Mental health and health behaviors before and during the initial phase of the COVID-19 lockdown: Longitudinal analyses of the UK household longitudinal study A Researchers Guide to the National Statistics Socio-Economic Classification Intergenerational social mobility and allostatic load in Great Britain Intergenerational social mobility and health in Russia: Mind over matter Subjective social mobility and health in Germany A note on a Stata plugin for estimating group-based trajectory models Heterogeneous mental health development during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom L.E. and P.P. conceptualized the study, executed the analysis, and wrote the manuscript. Open Access funding enabled and organized by Projekt DEAL. The authors declare no competing interests. Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to L.E. Publisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http:// creat iveco mmons. org/ licen ses/ by/4. 0/.