FACETS (Jan 2024)

Youth COVID-19 stressors and associations with self-perceived health, depression, anxiety, and at-risk alcohol and cannabis use

  • Tracie O. Afifi,
  • Janique Fortier,
  • Samantha Salmon,
  • Tamara Taillieu,
  • Ana Osorio,
  • Leslie Roos,
  • Ashley Stewart-Tufescu,
  • Lil Tonmyr,
  • Andrea Gonzalez,
  • Melissa Kimber,
  • Jitender Sareen,
  • Harriet L. MacMillan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1139/facets-2023-0160
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Adolescents and young adults have been particularly vulnerable to disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The objectives were to identify youth's self-reported pandemic-related stressors and examine how these stressors were related to six negative health outcomes: self-perceived, fair-to-poor physical, and mental health, depression, anxiety, and at-risk alcohol and cannabis use. Data were from the Well-Being and Experiences Study (The WE Study) from Manitoba, Canada (17–22 years old; n = 587; collected from November 2021 to January 2022). The COVID-19 stressors reported most frequently since pandemic onset included: (1) not being able to spend time with friends (78.5%); (2) feeling lonely or isolated (69.9%); and (3) remote learning for school, college, or university (68.4%). In reference to the “past month”, frequently reported stressors were (1) remote learning (42.6%); (2) feeling lonely or isolated (41.2%); and (3) uncertainty about the future (41.1%). Overall, 26.1% of the sample perceived their physical health as fair-to-poor and 59.1% perceive their mental health as fair-to-poor. A number of stressors were related to fair-to-poor mental health, depression, and anxiety; fewer were related to fair-to-poor physical health and at-risk alcohol and cannabis use. These findings can inform future pandemics and recovery efforts to improve pandemic-related health risks among youth.

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