The Impact of the Successive Outbreaks of COVID-19, Vaccination, and Physical Activity on Mental Health in the Argentine Population: A Repeated Cross-Sectional Study
Alejo Ramiro Barbuzza, Fabricio Ballarini, Celina Goyeneche, Victoria Reppucci, Pedro Benedetti, Franco Moscato, Jorge H Medina, Cynthia Katche, Diego Moncada, Haydeé Viola

TL;DR
This study tracked mental health in Argentina during the pandemic, finding that anxiety and depression peaked in the second wave but decreased later, possibly due to vaccination and physical activity.
Contribution
The study provides longitudinal evidence on the persistence of mental health symptoms during successive pandemic waves and identifies protective factors like vaccination and exercise.
Findings
The highest rates of anxiety and depression were observed during the second wave of the pandemic in May 2021.
Vaccination and frequent physical activity were associated with reduced mental health symptoms.
Mental health symptoms decreased by the end of the third wave despite higher infection rates.
Abstract
Background and objectives A controversy regarding the duration of generalized anxiety disorders (GAD) and depressive symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic arose, stating that these symptoms last a short time, perhaps a few months, or that they are more persistent over time. After more than three years of the pandemic, this is still a question that requires an answer. The main goal of this work was to record the levels of self-perceived GAD and depression in the Argentine population at several time points during the pandemic to characterize whether they were transient or persisted over the successive waves of contagion. Furthermore, we studied the association between anti-COVID-19 vaccination and the high frequency of physical activity with GAD and depression levels to evaluate a possible protective role of these factors on mental health. Methods We used a descriptive and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · Digital Mental Health Interventions · Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes
