Associational and plausible causal effects of COVID-19 public health policies on economic and mental distress
Reka Sundaram-Stukel, Richard J Davidson

TL;DR
This study analyzes how COVID-19 public health policies, case numbers, and economic distress causally and associationally impacted mental health in the U.S. using survey and mobility data from April 2020 to February 2021.
Contribution
It combines survey, mobility, and case data to disentangle causal effects of policies and economic factors on mental distress during the pandemic.
Findings
COVID-19 cases increased job loss and economic distress.
Economic distress significantly increased mental health issues.
Food insecurity was associated with decreased mental distress.
Abstract
Background The COVID-19 pandemic has increased mental distress globally. The proportion of people reporting anxiety is 26%, and depression is 34% points. Disentangling associational and causal contributions of behavior, COVID-19 cases, and economic distress on mental distress will dictate different mitigation strategies to reduce long-term pandemic-related mental distress. Methods We use the Household Pulse Survey (HPS) April 2020 to February 2021 data to examine mental distress among U.S. citizens attributable to COVID-19. We combined HPS survey data with publicly available state-level weekly: COVID-19 case and death data from the Centers for Disease Control, public policies, and Apple and Google mobility data. Finally, we constructed economic and mental distress measures to estimate structural models with lag dependent variables to tease out public health policies' associational and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · Employment and Welfare Studies · Health disparities and outcomes
