4.7 Article

Predictors of depression: lifestyle choices during the pandemic

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1194270

Keywords

mental health; wellbeing; lifestyle; social media; sport; economic worries; depression; COVID-19

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This study aims to investigate the impact of singular pandemic stressors on the population and quantify the contribution of different predictors of depression. The research collected data from 11,340 respondents from six European countries through a structured online survey and conducted statistical analysis on behavioral patterns and psychological well-being of different groups. The role of social media and its impact on depression symptoms in different age groups and characteristics were analyzed.
Our study intends to specify the impact of the singular pandemic stressors on the population and also quantify the contribution of different predictors of depression; some of them are stronger than others, and this research shows how the whole effect is divided into single items. This research included a structured online survey using data from 11,340 respondents from six European countries during the first months of the pandemic. The statistical analysis focused on how behavioural patterns appear in different groups of the population and how they mark the psychological wellbeing of these groups with regard to various factors. We targeted social media's role and analyzed the impact of its consumption on symptoms of depression in different groups divided by age and other characteristics. The analysis creates a mosaic of lifestyle choices and other characteristics that manifest different effects on depression inside selected groups whereas several groups generated by the cluster analysis are less vulnerable to their effect than others. Regarding our findings, the perceived reality through information sources and the manner of their processing seems to be more significant than the tangible reality (poor self-reported health correlated with depression more strongly than intrinsic health limitations).

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