2022
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-2064928/v1
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The association of severe COVID anxiety with poor social functioning, quality of life, and protective behaviours among adults in United Kingdom: A cross-sectional study.

Abstract: Background: Anxiety about COVID-19 is common. For most people this is an appropriate response to the loss of livelihoods and loved-ones, disruptions to social networks, and uncertainty about the future. However, for others these anxieties relate to contracting the virus itself. Little is known about the characteristics of people with severe COVID anxiety or the impact it has on their daily lives. Methods: We conducted a two-phase cross-sectional survey of people aged 18 or over who were living in United Kingdo… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…Lastly, the dissemination of information may have contributed to the increase or development of anxiety about the pandemic and its containment efforts. The rapid availability of information, the constantly increasing number of infections, the details about the virus’ fast spread, the many fatalities, the initially unclear treatment methods, and the widely strict – and also diverse and common – containment measures resulted in a large amount of predominantly negative reports about the virus from almost all media sources, which could ultimately have an unfavorable impact on health anxiety (King et al, 2022; Landi, Pakenham, Boccolini, Grandi, & Tossani, 2020) and furthermore on the frequency of Google queries for parameters such as ‘anxiety’.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lastly, the dissemination of information may have contributed to the increase or development of anxiety about the pandemic and its containment efforts. The rapid availability of information, the constantly increasing number of infections, the details about the virus’ fast spread, the many fatalities, the initially unclear treatment methods, and the widely strict – and also diverse and common – containment measures resulted in a large amount of predominantly negative reports about the virus from almost all media sources, which could ultimately have an unfavorable impact on health anxiety (King et al, 2022; Landi, Pakenham, Boccolini, Grandi, & Tossani, 2020) and furthermore on the frequency of Google queries for parameters such as ‘anxiety’.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%