Frontiers in Sports and Active Living (Oct 2021)

Psychosocial Health and Physical Activity in People With Major Depression in the Context of COVID-19

  • Robyn Cody,
  • Jan-Niklas Kreppke,
  • Johannes Beck,
  • Lars Donath,
  • Anne Eckert,
  • Christian Imboden,
  • Martin Hatzinger,
  • Edith Holsboer-Trachsler,
  • Undine E. Lang,
  • Sebastian Ludyga,
  • Sarah Mans,
  • Thorsten Mikoteit,
  • Anja Oswald,
  • Anja Rogausch,
  • Nina Schweinfurth,
  • Lukas Zahner,
  • Oliver Faude,
  • Markus Gerber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2021.685117
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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Introduction: Major depression is a psychiatric disease associated with physical inactivity, which in turn affects mental and physical health. A randomized controlled trial is being implemented to facilitate physical activity in people with major depression. In March 2020, Swiss state authorities temporarily legislated a lockdown to contain the Coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19), which influenced health, behavior and research. The aim of this study was to find out whether data gathered before and during/after the lockdown among in-patients with major depression differ with regard to psychosocial health, physical activity and related attitudes and to establish whether baseline data have been affected by the lockdown.Methods: This is a cross-sectional analysis within a randomized controlled trial. Physically inactive, adult in-patients diagnosed with major depression were recruited from four Swiss psychiatric clinics between January 2019 and December 2020. Psychosocial health was measured with questionnaires pertaining to stress, sleep and health-related quality of life. Physical activity was measured with the Simple Physical Activity Questionnaire. Explicit attitudes were measured with seven questionnaires pertaining to physical activity-related motivation and volition. Implicit attitudes toward physical activity were captured with a single target implicit association test.Results: The sample consisted of 165 participants (n = 119 before lockdown, n = 46 during/after lockdown). No statistically significant differences were found between in-patients with major depression assessed before and during/after the COVID-19 lockdown with regard to psychosocial health (stress, p = 0.51; sleep, p = 0.70; physical component of health-related quality of life, p = 0.55; mental component of health-related quality of life, p = 0.64), self-reported physical activity (p = 0.16) and explicit as well as implicit attitudes toward physical activity (p = 0.94). Hence, the COVID-19-induced lockdown seems not to have led to group differences.Conclusion: Baseline data gathered in in-patients suffering from major depression who are physically inactive upon admission to in-patient treatment in Switzerland seem to be unaffected by the COVID-19-induced lockdown. To assess changes in said population regarding psychosocial health and physical activity patterns over time, longitudinal data are needed.

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