BMJ Open (Apr 2022)

For a structured response to the psychosocial consequences of the restrictive measures imposed by the global COVID-19 health pandemic: the MAVIPAN longitudinal prospective cohort study protocol

  • Chantal Mérette,
  • Holly Witteman,
  • Marie-Pierre Gagnon,
  • Annie Leblanc,
  • Patrick Archambault,
  • Richard Fleet,
  • Émilie Dionne,
  • Jean-Pierre Després,
  • Matthew Menear,
  • Michel Gilbert,
  • Antoine Groulx,
  • Marie-Christine Ouellet,
  • Lily Lessard,
  • Annie Vallieres,
  • Marc-André Roy,
  • Catherine Mercier,
  • Caroline Cellard,
  • Marie Baron,
  • Patrick Blouin,
  • George Tarabulsy,
  • Francois Routhier,
  • Marc Hébert,
  • Yves De Koninck,
  • Delphine Collin-Vézina,
  • Nancy Côté,
  • Marie-Hélène Gagné,
  • Maripier Isabelle,
  • Marie-Christine Saint-Jacques,
  • Claudia Savard,
  • Marie-Pier Déry,
  • Éric Gagnon Geneviève Roch,
  • Danielle Nadeau,
  • Julie Tremblay,
  • Marie-Claude Simard Geneviève Dionne,
  • Yves De Koninck,
  • Martin Provencher,
  • Marie-France Demers,
  • Pierre Marquet,
  • Simon Beaulieu-Bonneau Marie-Ève Lamontagne,
  • Normand Boucher,
  • Édith St-Hilaire,
  • Marie-Hélène Morin,
  • Annie Bérubé,
  • Denis Lafortune,
  • Luc Vigneault,
  • Guy Poulin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-048749
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4

Abstract

Read online

Introduction The COVID-19 pandemic and associated restrictive measures have caused important disruptions in economies and labour markets, changed the way we work and socialise, forced schools to close and healthcare and social services to reorganise. This unprecedented crisis forces individuals to make considerable efforts to adapt and will have psychological and social consequences, mainly on vulnerable individuals, that will remain once the pandemic is contained and will most likely exacerbate existing social and gender health inequalities. This crisis also puts a toll on the capacity of our healthcare and social services structures to provide timely and adequate care. The MAVIPAN (Ma vie et la pandémie/ My Life and the Pandemic) study aims to document how individuals, families, healthcare workers and health organisations are affected by the pandemic and how they adapt.Methods and analysis MAVIPAN is a 5-year longitudinal prospective cohort study launched in April 2020 across the province of Quebec (Canada). Quantitative data will be collected through online questionnaires (4–6 times/year) according to the evolution of the pandemic. Qualitative data will be collected with individual and group interviews and will seek to deepen our understanding of coping strategies. Analysis will be conducted under a mixed-method umbrella, with both sequential and simultaneous analyses of quantitative and qualitative data.Ethics and dissemination MAVIPAN aims to support the healthcare and social services system response by providing high-quality, real-time information needed to identify those who are most affected by the pandemic and by guiding public health authorities’ decision making regarding intervention and resource allocation to mitigate these impacts. MAVIPAN was approved by the Ethics Committees of the Primary Care and Population Health Research Sector of CIUSSS de la Capitale-Nationale (Committee of record) and of the additional participating institutions.Trial registration number NCT04575571.