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Thursday, November 5, 2020

Higher risk of mental health deterioration during the Covid-19 lockdown among students rather than non-students. The French Confins study (medRxiv, 5 November 2020 - preprint)

Title:
Higher risk of mental health deterioration during the Covid-19 lockdown among students rather than non-students. The French Confins study
 
Authors:
Julie Arsandaux, Ilaria Montagni, Melissa Macalli, Nathalie Texier, Mathilde Pouriel, Raphael Germain, Adel Mebarki, Sherazade Kinouani, Marie Tournier, Stephane Schuck & Christophe Tzourio

Published:
medRxiv, 5 November 2020
[Keep in mind that this is a preprint and not yet peer reviewed.]

Abstract:
Background: Covid-19 pandemic and its consequences have raised fears of its psychological impact. The objective of this study was to estimate the effect of student status on mental health conditions during Covid-19 general lockdown among adults in France. 
 
Methods: Using cross-sectional data of the Confins cohort, we estimated the effect of student status on depressive and anxiety symptoms, suicidal thoughts and perceived stress using multivariate logistic regression analyses. Stratified models for college students and non-students were performed to identify associated population-specific factors. Results: Among the 2260 included participants, students represented 59% (n=1335 vs 925 non-students) and 78% of the total sample were female. Student status was more frequently associated with depressive symptoms (adjusted OR(aOR)=1.58; 95%CI 1.17;2.14), anxiety symptoms (aOR=1.51; 95%CI 1.10;2.07), perceived stress (n=1919, aOR=1.70, 95%CI 1.26;2.29) and frequent suicidal thoughts (n=1919, aOR=1.57, 95%CI 0.97;2.53). Lockdown conditions that could be potentially aggravating on mental health like isolation had a higher impact on students than non-students. 
 
Limitations: Participants were volunteers, which could limit generalisation of the findings. The cross-sectional design did not allow determining if lockdown impacted directly mental health or if there is another cause. However, we adjusted analyses with the history of psychiatric disorders, and factors related to lockdown conditions were associated with mental health disturbances. 
 
Conclusions: College student's mental health is of great importance in the context of the general lockdown set up during the pandemic. Follow-up and interventions should be implemented especially for those at high-risk (younger people and those with history of psychiatric disorders).