The Mental Health and Well-Being of Adults With Intellectual Disabilities During the COVID-19 Pandemic Across the UK: A Four-Wave Longitudinal Analysis.

IF 2.1 2区 医学 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Amanda Gillooly, Paul Thompson, Jill Bradshaw, Sue Caton, Chris Hatton, Andrew Jahoda, Rosemary Kelly, Roseann Maguire, Edward Oloidi, Laurence Taggart, Stuart Todd, Richard P Hastings
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Abstract

Background: Research concerning the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health and well-being of adults with intellectual disabilities has been cross-sectional and small scale. We examined the trajectory of mental health and well-being across the pandemic period across the UK and the factors which predicted different mental health trajectories.

Method: Adults with intellectual disabilities participated in co-designed structured interviews. Four waves of data were collected between December 2020 and late 2022. At Wave 1, 621 adults with intellectual disabilities participated, with 355 at Wave 4. Well-being, pandemic anxiety, depression, anxiety, anger and loneliness outcomes were measured. Latent class mixed modelling was used to identify subgroups and within-group trajectories.

Results: Well-being and pandemic anxiety remained relatively stable across time, but levels of anger, depression, anxiety and loneliness reduced gradually over time. Overall patterns masked trajectory subgroups, with differences in intercept and steepness of decline or increase in mental health problems. Different factors were generally influential for trajectory class membership and overall change across time for outcomes. Leaving the house for exercise or green spaces reported increasing well-being and reduced loneliness. Similarly, those working, volunteering or in education at Wave 1 were found to have increasing well-being and reduced loneliness, sadness and worry, and increasing wellbeing and reducing anger if they were working pre-pandemic.

Conclusions: Social connection and engagement in purposeful activity were vital to maintaining the mental health and well-being of people with intellectual disabilities. Factors that were found to reduce mental well-being during the pandemic should be considered in planning for future major public health challenges and in promoting better mental well-being for people with intellectual disabilities in everyday life.

英国COVID-19大流行期间智力残疾成年人的心理健康和福祉:四波纵向分析
背景:关于COVID-19大流行对智力障碍成人心理健康和福祉影响的研究一直是横向和小规模的。我们研究了整个英国大流行时期的心理健康和福祉轨迹,以及预测不同心理健康轨迹的因素。方法:成人智障患者参与共同设计的结构化访谈。在2020年12月至2022年底期间收集了四波数据。在第1轮中,621名智力残疾的成年人参与,在第4轮中有355名。测量了幸福感、流行病焦虑、抑郁、焦虑、愤怒和孤独的结果。潜在类别混合模型用于识别亚组和组内轨迹。结果:幸福感和大流行焦虑在一段时间内保持相对稳定,但愤怒、抑郁、焦虑和孤独的水平随着时间的推移逐渐降低。总体模式掩盖了轨迹亚组,在心理健康问题下降或增加的截点和陡峭程度上存在差异。不同的因素一般影响轨迹、班级成员和结果随时间的总体变化。据报道,离开家去锻炼或绿地会增加幸福感,减少孤独感。同样,那些在第一波工作、志愿服务或接受教育的人被发现幸福感增加,孤独感、悲伤和担忧减少,如果他们在大流行前工作,幸福感增加,愤怒减少。结论:社会联系和参与有目的的活动对维持智力残疾者的心理健康和福祉至关重要。在规划未来的重大公共卫生挑战和促进智力残疾者在日常生活中改善心理健康时,应考虑到在大流行期间发现的影响心理健康的因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
5.60%
发文量
81
期刊介绍: The Journal of Intellectual Disability Research is devoted exclusively to the scientific study of intellectual disability and publishes papers reporting original observations in this field. The subject matter is broad and includes, but is not restricted to, findings from biological, educational, genetic, medical, psychiatric, psychological and sociological studies, and ethical, philosophical, and legal contributions that increase knowledge on the treatment and prevention of intellectual disability and of associated impairments and disabilities, and/or inform public policy and practice. Expert reviews on themes in which recent research has produced notable advances will be included. Such reviews will normally be by invitation.
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