4.7 Article

Diurnal dynamics of stress and mood during COVID-19 lockdown: a large multinational ecological momentary assessment study

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.2480

Keywords

COVID-19; diurnal changes; ecological momentary assessment; hair cortisol; mood; stress

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The COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent lockdowns have had a detrimental effect on people's mental health. A study found that individuals' stress and mood fluctuated throughout the day during lockdown, and this was influenced by factors such as age, gender, financial security, depressive symptoms, and loneliness. Additionally, cortisol concentrations decreased following the lockdown, but this was not related to individual characteristics.
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in severe disruption to people's lives as governments imposed national 'lockdowns'. Several large surveys have underlined the detrimental short- and long-term mental health consequences resulting from this disruption, but survey findings are only informative of individuals' retrospectively reported psychological states. Furthermore, knowledge on psychobiological responses to lockdown restrictions is scarce. We used smartphone-based real-time assessments in 731 participants for 7 days and investigated how individuals' self-reported stress and mood fluctuated diurnally during lockdown in spring 2020. We found that age, gender, financial security, depressive symptoms and trait loneliness modulated the diurnal dynamics of participants' momentary stress and mood. For example, younger and less financially secure individuals showed an attenuated decline in stress as the day progressed, and similarly, more lonely individuals showed a diminished increase in calmness throughout the day. Hair collected from a subsample (n = 140) indicated a decrease in cortisol concentrations following lockdown, but these changes were not related to any of the assessed person-related characteristics. Our findings provide novel insights into the psychobiological impact of lockdown and have implications for how, when and which individuals might benefit most from interventions during psychologically demanding periods.

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