Psychological Distress After Covid-19 Recovery: Reciprocal Effects With Temperament and Emotional Dysregulation. An Exploratory Study of Patients Over 60 Years of Age Assessed in a Post-acute Care Service

Marco Modica, Silvia Montanari, Beatrice Terenzi, Francesco Landi, Gabriele Sani, Antonio Gasbarrini, Carlo Romano Settanni, Francesca Benvenuto, Giulia Bramato, Vincenzo Brandi, Angelo Carfi', Francesca Ciciarello, Andrea Lo Monaco, Anna Maria Martone, Emanuele Marzetti, Francesco Cosimo Pagano, Sara Rocchi, Andrea Salerno, Matteo Tosato, Marcello TrittoRiccardo Calvani, Lucio Catalano, Giulia Savera, Roberto Cauda, Enrica Tamburrini, Alberto Borghetti, Rita Murri, Antonella Cingolani, Giulio Ventura, Eleonora Taddei, Leonardo Stella, Giovanni Addolorato, Francesco Franceschi, Geltrude Mingrone, Maria Assunta Zocco, Maurizio Sanguinetti, Paola Cattani Franchi, Simona Marchetti, Brunella Posteraro, Michela Sali, Alessandra Bizzarro, Alessandra Lauria, Stanislao Rizzo, Maria Cristina Savastano, Gloria Gambini, Carola Culiersi, Giulio Cesare Passali, Gaetano Paludetti, Jacopo Galli, Lucia D'Alatri, Fabrizio Crudo, Ylenia Longobardi, Mariaconsiglia Santantonio, Danilo Buonsenso, Piero Valentini, Dario Sinatti, Cristina De Rose, Luca Richeldi, Francesco Lombardi, Gabriele Sani, Marco Modica, Luigi Natale, Riccardo Marano, Luca Petricca, Anna Laura Fedele, Marco Maria Lizzio, Barbara Tolusso, Stefano Alivernini, Angelo Santoliquido, Luca Santoro, Antonio Nesci, Giorgia Mari, Maria Raffaella Marchese, Carolina Ausili Cefaro

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo in rivistaArticolo in rivista

Abstract

To study the long-term psychological effects of Covid-19 disease, we recruited 61 patients older than 60 years of age and administered the Kessler questionnaire K10 to assess psychological distress and classify them according to mental health risk groups. Patients' affective temperaments were assessed with the 39-item form of the Temperament Evaluation of Memphis, Pisa, Paris, and San Diego (TEMPS-A-39) and emotional dysregulation with the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS). Patients were divided in two samples according to their scores on the K10, i.e., a high likelihood of psychological distress group (N = 18) and a low likelihood of psychological distress group (N = 43). The two groups differed on their gender composition, in that more women (N = 11) were in the former and more men in the latter (N = 29) (χ2 = 4.28; p = 0.039). The high likelihood of psychological distress group scored higher on the Cyclothymic (3.39 ± 3.45 vs. 0.93 ± 1.08, p < 0.001) and the Depressive (2.28 ± 2.82 vs. 0.65 ± 1.09, p = 0.01) affective temperaments of the TEMPS and on the lack of Impulse control (12.67 ± 4.04 vs. 9.63 ± 3.14, p = 0.003) and lack of Clarity (15.00 ± 5.56 vs. 9.85 ± 4.67, p = 0.004) scales of the DERS. Our results show that having had Covid-19 may be related with high likelihood for psychological distress in advanced-age people and this may in turn be associated with impaired emotional regulation and higher scores on depressive and cyclothymic temperaments.
Lingua originaleEnglish
pagine (da-a)590135-N/A
RivistaFrontiers in Psychiatry
Volume11
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2020

Keywords

  • COVID-19
  • affective temperaments
  • aging
  • emotional dysregulation
  • nasal swab
  • nasopharyngeal swab
  • psychological distress

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