COVID Stress, as Universal as the Pandemic
"[It's vital to identify environmental threats from a] fitness survival perspective.""We only became predators much later in evolutionary history [leading us to over-interpret risks to survival because the human mind is poor at probability-estimating; a heritage of our hunter-gatherer brains].""[With COVID-19, there is uncertainty] because the medical news changes every day.""...Generation Z and millennials were already very vulnerable, they were already prone to anxiety and depression and for many of them, I fear the confinement has made it much worse.""We're still not sure what happened, where the virus came from and COVID conspiracy theories are spreading.""Just the simple act of being able to share food and stories with your friends has become very special.""The constant state of anxiety and uncertainty, the isolation, the lack of meaning and purpose, these are all things that are accompanied with negative affect, which make us more prone to being victims of our own emotions.""We're constantly missing out in these tiny little micro actions, but these micro actions eventually amount to us becoming better persons for the sake of others. Doing things that people had lost track of because of the rat race of our daily lives."Samuel Veissiere, anthropologist, assistant professor of psychiatry, McGill University
"We don't really know, especially because we don't have that comparator to say, this is how many would be experiencing lifetime anxiety prior to the pandemic.""But it's important for people to understand that if you are experiencing those symptoms, you're not alone. This is an unprecedented time."Tara Elton-Marshall, scientist, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health"These are stressful times and there are things to be concerned about. But a healthy level of anxiety gives people agency.""It's when the feelings start to impair functioning in your ability to work, to parent, to be present in a healthy way in your relationships, that a health professional needs to be involved."Dr.Valerie Taylor, chief, department of psychiatry, University of Calgary
Experts in the field of mental health swiftly became concerned about the
impact of fear, isolation and pandemic policies on the human psyche
when the global pandemic was declared, the series of shut-downs in
various countries in response to the invasion of the SARS-Cov-2 virus
which began to spread COVID-19 in populations, altering peoples' lives
in ways never before encountered, taking an unheard-of toll on society
in general, on the business world, on governments and the international
community.
Our vulnerabilities, once the scaffolding of civilizational norms and
our habitual place in the order of things were suddenly reversed and
social-isolation mandated, struck people with a sense of total
helplessness and uncertainty how to respond, in a growing sense of
psychic dislocation. "It's sad, but not surprising",
to see that outcome, commented Dr.Veissiere, co-director of the
Culture, Mind and Brain Program at McGill, of the fact that a new
national survey indicates a sizeable number of people have been severely
affected psychologically.
One quarter of Canadians, according to the survey results, experienced
moderate to severe levels of anxiety, another quarter experiences
occasional or frequent loneliness, and 20 percent reported depression.
Close to a quarter of the 1,005 survey participants reported at least
once-weekly binge-drinking. Women, parents with young children, 18- to
39-year-olds appear to be faring worse than others, and notable numbers
report being nervous and edgy, unable to relax.
People are irritable, readily annoyed, with a problematical number of days spent concerned that "something awful might happen",
over the coronavirus hanging over society, like a Damaclean Sword. This
survey represents the first in a planned series by the Centre for
Addiction and Mental Health, collaborating with Delvinia, a research
tech and data collection company, offering access to the survey data "to help mental health professionals get ahead of what's coming".
Angus Reid |
Within any population there are people whose minds are geared to accept or struggle against situations, so that "if you're a 'no-big-deal' kind of person, you'll find the information confirms that bias",
while catastrophizers who believe something is far worse than it
actually is, react otherwise. When the World Health Organization first
declared the death rate of COVID-19 at 3.4 percent, that data caused a
frisson of fear.
The U.S. Centres for Disease Control and Prevention this week released
their 'best estimate', placing the overall death rate at 0.4 percent, a
more reasonable, less fear-inducing figure for those who show symptoms,
at the same time estimating 35 percent of infected people will never
develop symptoms. Because of the shut-down conditions Canada imposed in
an effort to 'flatten the curve', two million jobs were forfeited in
April.
Resulting in a large segment of the population left to struggle with
feelings of boredom, frustration and fear. Younger adults appear to be
the most anxious, with people 60 and older less so, even as it is the
older population that is more susceptible to the more serious effects of
COVID than the younger demographic in one of those peculiar twists of
irony in human nature. Experts hazard the opinion that people given to
anxiety under normal circumstances now stressed under COVID have simply
become more anxious.
According to the survey, it is women more than men who have ended up
struggling more over the conditions they now find themselves in. More
likely to have lost employment, to be shouldering child and elder care,
and for many women home isn't quite the haven it should be. "We're seeing an increase in domestic abuse",
notes Dr.Valerie Taylor. A 50 percent increase in texts and calls has
been reported by Kids Help Phone, a national support service for youth.
Angus Reid |
Anxiety represents uncertainty about what might happen. The more one
thinks about possibilities and dwells on worst-case scenarios, the
likelier they are to have heightened anxiety and depression. The very
fact that SARS-CoV-2 remains a universal planetary threat speaks to our
susceptibility and uncertainty. And when people feel helpless to avoid
disaster fear and panic can set in, and spread. The antidote to that is
to find comfort, reassurance, to restore feelings of safety.
And those can be found in re-establishing contact with those who have a
meaningful impact on our lives, in a relaxation of the shutdown, and
opening up of opportunities to once again be together with people we
know and care about. To share experiences, meals, the meaning of life as
social creatures dependent for our happiness and satisfaction on our
contact with others, deriving pleasure from ordinary things that under
normal circumstances are taken for granted.
A woman wearing a mask talks on her phone during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto on Tuesday, April 28, 2020. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette |
Labels: Anxiety, COVID, Depression, Mental Health, Stress
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