Scientific Reports (Mar 2024)

Mental health improvement after the COVID-19 pandemic in individuals with psychological distress

  • Mario Reutter,
  • Katharina Hutterer,
  • Marthe Gründahl,
  • Dominik Gall,
  • Udo Dannlowski,
  • Katharina Domschke,
  • Elisabeth J. Leehr,
  • Tina B. Lonsdorf,
  • Ulrike Lueken,
  • Andreas Reif,
  • Miriam A. Schiele,
  • Peter Zwanzger,
  • Paul Pauli,
  • Grit Hein,
  • Matthias Gamer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-55839-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract The COVID-19 pandemic and associated countermeasures had an immensely disruptive impact on people’s lives. Due to the lack of systematic pre-pandemic data, however, it is still unclear how individuals’ psychological health has been affected across this incisive event. In this study, we analyze longitudinal data from two healthy samples (N = 307) to provide quasi-longitudinal insight into the full trajectory of psychological burden before (baseline), during the first peak, and at a relative downturn of the COVID-19 pandemic. Our data indicated a medium rise in psychological strain from baseline to the first peak of the pandemic (d = 0.40). Surprisingly, this was overcompensated by a large decrease of perceived burden until downturn (d = − 0.93), resulting in a positive overall effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health (d = 0.44). Accounting for this paradoxical positive effect, our results reveal that the post-pandemic increase in mental health is driven by individuals that were already facing psychological challenges before the pandemic. These findings suggest that coping with acute challenges such as the COVID-19 pandemic can stabilize previously impaired mental health through reframing processes.