Frontiers in Psychiatry (Sep 2022)

COVID-19 and psychiatric disorders: The impact of face masks in emotion recognition face masks and emotion recognition in psychiatry

  • Andrea Escelsior,
  • Andrea Escelsior,
  • Andrea Escelsior,
  • Maria Bianca Amadeo,
  • Maria Bianca Amadeo,
  • Davide Esposito,
  • Davide Esposito,
  • Anna Rosina,
  • Anna Rosina,
  • Alice Trabucco,
  • Alberto Inuggi,
  • Alberto Inuggi,
  • Alberto Inuggi,
  • Beatriz Pereira da Silva,
  • Beatriz Pereira da Silva,
  • Beatriz Pereira da Silva,
  • Beatriz Pereira da Silva,
  • Gianluca Serafini,
  • Gianluca Serafini,
  • Gianluca Serafini,
  • Monica Gori,
  • Monica Gori,
  • Mario Amore,
  • Mario Amore,
  • Mario Amore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.932791
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

Read online

Since the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, reading facial expressions has become more complex due to face masks covering the lower part of people's faces. A history of psychiatric illness has been associated with higher rates of complications, hospitalization, and mortality due to COVID-19. Psychiatric patients have well-documented difficulties reading emotions from facial expressions; accordingly, this study assesses how using face masks, such as those worn for preventing COVID-19 transmission, impacts the emotion recognition skills of patients with psychiatric disorders. To this end, the current study asked patients with bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder, schizophrenia, and healthy individuals to identify facial emotions on face images with and without facial masks. Results demonstrate that the emotion recognition skills of all participants were negatively influenced by face masks. Moreover, the main insight of the study is that the impairment is crucially significant when patients with major depressive disorder and schizophrenia had to identify happiness at a low-intensity level. These findings have important implications for satisfactory social relationships and well-being. If emotions with positive valence are hardly understood by specific psychiatric patients, there is an even greater requirement for doctor-patient interactions in public primary care.

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