People who were bedridden with COVID-19 for at least a week have a greater degree of problems with anxiety and depression following the infection, compared with patients with milder symptoms, the study featuring 250,000 people from Sweden, Iceland, Denmark, Estonia, Norway, and the UK concluded.
"It is difficult to say what this connection may be due to, but possible explanations may be a combination of concerns about long-term health effects and persistent physical symptoms that limit social contacts and contribute to a feeling of helplessness", Anikó Lovik, a postdoctoral fellow at Sweden's Karolinska Institute and one of the authors of the study, told the science portal Forskning.se. "It is also possible that severe COVID-19 initiates inflammatory processes that have previously been linked to an increased risk of mental illness".
"It is possible that mild or asymptomatic COVID-19 infection results in some relief among these individuals who can now return to their normal lives. This may be one of the reasons for the lower incidence of mental symptoms observed in this group compared to those who are still worried about becoming infected and therefore avoid social interactions", Fang Fang, a professor at the Department of Environmental Medicine at the Karolinska Institute, mused.
The participants themselves estimated their symptoms of depression, anxiety, difficulty sleeping, and COVID-related stress in a questionnaire and reported how long they were in bed due to the disease. Overall, the participants have been studied for 16 months.
Since the onslaught of the COVID-19 pandemic in December 2019, over 466 million cases have been recorded worldwide, with 6 million deaths.