4.4 Review

Fear of COVID-19 and its association with mental health-related factors: systematic review and meta-analysis

Journal

BJPSYCH OPEN
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1192/bjo.2022.26

Keywords

COVID-19; fear; anxiety disorders; depressive disorders; sleep disorders

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This systematic review and meta-analysis synthesized empirical evidence from 91 studies, involving 88,320 participants from 36 countries. Fear of COVID-19 is associated with various mental health-related factors, highlighting the need for programs to reduce COVID-19 fear and improve mental health.
Background The severity of COVID-19 remains high worldwide. Therefore, millions of individuals are likely to suffer from fear of COVID-19 and related mental health factors. Aims The present systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to synthesize empirical evidence to understand fear of COVID-19 and its associations with mental health-related problems during this pandemic period. Method Relevant studies were searched for on five databases (Scopus, ProQuest, EMBASE, PubMed Central, and ISI Web of Knowledge), using relevant terms (COVID-19-related fear, anxiety, depression, mental health-related factors, mental well-being and sleep problems). All studies were included for analyses irrespective of their methodological quality, and the impact of quality on pooled effect size was examined by subgroup analysis. Results The meta-analysis pooled data from 91 studies comprising 88 320 participants (mean age 38.88 years; 60.66% females) from 36 countries. The pooled estimated mean of fear of COVID-19 was 13.11 (out of 35), using the Fear of COVID-19 Scale. The associations between fear of COVID-19 and mental health-related factors were mostly moderate (Fisher's z = 0.56 for mental health-related factors; 0.54 for anxiety; 0.42 for stress; 0.40 for depression; 0.29 for sleep problems and -0.24 for mental well-being). Methodological quality did not affect these associations. Conclusions Fear of COVID-19 has associations with various mental health-related factors. Therefore, programmes for reducing fear of COVID-19 and improving mental health are needed.

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