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Gepubliceerd in:

05-07-2024

Disabled from work and depressed: cognitive factors associated with exacerbated or attenuated depression over the COVID-19 pandemic

Auteurs: Carolyn E. Schwartz, Katrina Borowiec

Gepubliceerd in: Quality of Life Research | Uitgave 9/2024

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Abstract

Background

People who were disabled from working reported substantially worse depression in recent research [1] despite adjustment for demographic covariates, cognitive-appraisal processes, and COVID-specific stressors, thus motivating the present work.

Objective

This study sought to “drill down” to understand employment-group differences (employed, retired, unemployed, disabled) in cognitive factors, and how these factors played into paths to depression during COVID early in the pandemic and depression trajectories over 15.5 months of follow-up.

Methods

This longitudinal cohort study (n = 771) included chronically ill and general-population samples in the United States, characterized into the same depression-trajectory groups as the earlier study [1]. The Quality-of-Life Appraisal Profilev2 Short-Form assessed cognitive-appraisal processes. COVID-specific scales assessed hardship, worry, and social support. Chi-square, Analysis of Variance, classification and regression tree, and random effects modeling investigated factors associated with reported depression over time specifically by employment group, rather than in the whole sample which was the focus of the earlier study.

Results

Disabled participants were disproportionately represented in the stably depressed trajectory group, reporting more hardship and worry, and lower social support than employed and retired participants (p < 0.0001). They were more likely to focus on health goals, problem goals, and emphasizing the negative (p < 0.001). They had different paths and cut-points to depression than employed/unemployed/retired participants. Even mild endorsement of emphasizing the negative and recent changes predicted higher depression. COVID-specific stressors and cognitive-appraisal processes were less implicated in depression among disabled participants compared to others.

Conclusions

Disabled participants were at greater risk of stable depression during the COVID pandemic. Small increases in emphasizing the negative were a path to worse depression, and disabled participants’ depression may be less reactive to external circumstances or ways of thinking.
Bijlagen
Alleen toegankelijk voor geautoriseerde gebruikers
Voetnoten
1
To take into account that we are modeling the intersection of multiple individual-level predictors, i.e., the interaction between levels of appraisal scores, COVID-specific stressors, employment group, and time.
 
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Metagegevens
Titel
Disabled from work and depressed: cognitive factors associated with exacerbated or attenuated depression over the COVID-19 pandemic
Auteurs
Carolyn E. Schwartz
Katrina Borowiec
Publicatiedatum
05-07-2024
Uitgeverij
Springer International Publishing
Gepubliceerd in
Quality of Life Research / Uitgave 9/2024
Print ISSN: 0962-9343
Elektronisch ISSN: 1573-2649
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-024-03700-5