The COVID-19 episode has had substantial negative impacts on mental
health across the population. The biggest impacts have been on the
gender and age groups broadly women and the young that already
had relatively low levels of mental health. Pre-existing
inequalities in mental health have therefore been exacerbated by
the crisis. The study, funded by the Economic and Social Research
Council, uses new data collected by the University of Essex at the
end of April. The data cover nearly...Request free trial
The COVID-19 episode has had substantial negative impacts on mental
health across the population. The biggest impacts have been on the
gender and age groups broadly women and the young that already
had relatively low levels of mental health. Pre-existing
inequalities in mental health have therefore been exacerbated by
the crisis.
The study, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council, uses
new data collected by the University of Essex at the end of April.
The data cover nearly 12,000 people who had been asked questions
about their mental health annually over several years and who were
asked the same questions again this April.
Almost a quarter of respondents reported experiencing at least one
mental health problem much more than normal, up from just 10% in
the most recent pre-crisis data.
Other key findings include:
-
An additional 7.2 million (14% of) people
aged 16+ report experiencing a mental health problem much more
than usual. This is over and above any changes
that would have been expected given the continuation of
pre-existing trends towards poorer mental health among the
population overall.
-
The scale of this deterioration in mental
health is of a magnitude unlike anything we have seen in recent
years. The impact of the pandemic on overall mental
health scores was nearly double the deterioration seen between
2014-15 and 2017-18. The magnitude of the effect is equivalent
to the difference in mental health between the richest 20% of
people and the poorest 20% in the latest pre-pandemic
data.
-
The share of people who report experiencing
at least one mental health problem much more than usual has
more than doubled, from one in ten (10%) to almost one in four
(24%) of those aged 16 and over. Younger women have
the highest rates of poor mental health on this measure the
prevalence in April 2020 was 35% for women aged 16-34 but it
has worsened across all age and gender groups (see Figure
1).
-
The groups hardest hit overall are those who
already had the worst mental health, and experienced the
worst recent trends, prior to the COVID-19
pandemic. The young have seen significantly greater
deteriorations in their mental health than have older groups,
and women more than men. This means young women are most
affected and older men are least affected (Figure 2). Using a
measure of overall mental health, women aged 16-24 had 16%
worse than average mental health scores before the crisis; this
differential rose to 27% in April 2020, despite the worsening
trend in the overall average score.
-
Controlling for other relevant factors, key
workers had less of a deterioration in mental health, whilst
those who were laid off, had young children or had COVID-19
symptoms on the day of the interview had greater
deterioration.Being furloughed was associated with a
deterioration in mental health to the extent that it came with
a reduction in earnings, but no additional deterioration beyond
that explained by falling earnings. There were also no
significant differentials by pre-existing health
vulnerabilities, marital status, ethnicity or region of
residence.
Figure 1. Proportion reporting at least one
mental health (GHQ-12) problem much more than usual by age and
sex, April 2020
Figure 2. Average overall mental health (GHQ-12)
scores by age and sex, April 2020. Higher scores indicate worse
mental health
Xiaowei Xu, a Senior Research Economist at IFS
and an author of the paper, said:
The effects of COVID-19 and the associated lockdown on mental
health have been very big indeed. Young people and women, already
at more risk of mental health problems, have experienced
particularly big impacts on their mental health. These impacts need
to be weighed alongside economic and other health effects of
policies as we move out of lockdown. It will be important to
monitor changes in mental health and to make sure that appropriate
support is given to those who are
struggling.
ENDS
Notes to editors:
1. The working paper 'The mental health effects of the first
two months of lockdown and social distancing during the
COVID-19 pandemic in the UK', by James Banks and Xiaowei Xu, will
be published at 00:01 on Wednesday 10 June 2020 on the IFS
website: www.ifs.org.uk
2. The analysis uses data from the UK Household
Longitudinal Study Understanding Society, waves 1-9 and COVID
modules: University of Essex, Institute for Social and Economic
Research. (2020a). Understanding Society: Waves 1-9, 2009-2018 and
Harmonised BHPS: Waves 1-18, 1991-2009. 12th Edition. UK Data
Service. SN: 6614, http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-6614-13; University
of Essex, Institute for Social and Economic Research. (2020b).
Understanding Society: COVID-19 Study, 2020. UK Data Service. SN:
8644, http://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-8644-1
3. The measure of mental health used is the General
Health Questionnaire (GHQ) 12 item measure of mental health,
distress and wellbeing which covers peoples feelings of: being
able to concentrate, losing sleep through worry, playing a useful
part in things, being capable of making decisions, being constantly
under strain, feeling able to overcome difficulties, enjoying day
to day activities, being able to face up to problems, feeling
unhappy or depressed, losing confidence in yourself, thinking of
yourself as a worthless person, happiness. We use three measures
based on the GHQ-12: the overall score, the number of problems
reported, and whether the respondent reports experiencing any
mental health problems much more than usual.
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