PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

How COVID-19 affected mental well-being: An 11- week trajectories of daily well-being of Koreans amidst COVID-19 by age, gender and region.

  • Incheol Choi,
  • Joo Hyun Kim,
  • Namhee Kim,
  • Eunsoo Choi,
  • Jongan Choi,
  • Hye Won Suk,
  • Jinkyung Na

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250252
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. e0250252

Abstract

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The present study examined the daily well-being of Koreans (n = 353,340) for 11 weeks during the COVID-19 pandemic (January 20 -April 7). We analyzed whether and how life satisfaction, positive affect, negative affect, and life meaning changed during the outbreak. First, we found that the well-being of Koreans changed daily in a cubic fashion, such that it declined and recovered during the early phase but declined substantially during the later phase (after COVID- 19 was declared world pandemic by WHO). Second, unlike other emotions, boredom displayed a distinctive pattern of linear increase, especially for younger people, suggesting that boredom might be, in part, responsible for their inability to comply with social distancing recommendations. Third, the well-being of older people and males changed less compared to younger people and females. Finally, daily well-being dropped significantly more in the hard-hit regions than in other regions. Implications and limitations are discussed.