Giving Compass' Take:
- Researchers at Brookings examine whether or not the COVID-19 pandemic worsened mental health outcomes.
- How can funders support better mental health outcomes going forward?
- Learn about supporting mental health during COVID-19.
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The COVID-19 pandemic was an unprecedented shock to U.S. society at a time when the nation was already coping with a crisis of despair and related deaths from suicides, overdoses, and alcohol poisoning. COVID’s impact was inequitable: Deaths were concentrated among the elderly and minorities working in essential jobs, groups who up to the pandemic had been reporting better mental health. Yet how the shock has affected society’s well-being and mental health is not fully understood. Exploring the impact by comparing 2019 to 2020 as reflected in nationally representative datasets, we found a variety of contrasting stories. While data from the 2019 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the 2020 Household Pulse Survey (HPS) show that depression and anxiety increased significantly, especially among young and low-income Americans in 2020, we found no such changes when analyzing alternative depression questions in the 2019-20 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS). Nevertheless, for the same period, determinants of mental health were similar in the NHIS, BRFSS, and HPS data.
Read the full article about mental health outcomes by Emily Dobson, Carol Graham, Tim Hua, and Sergio Pinto at Brookings.