Factors Associated with Older People’s Anxiety Symptom Positioning after COVID-19: Cross-Sectional Findings from a Canadian Sample
Gail Low, Anila Naz AliSher, Juceli Morero, Zhiwei Gao, Gloria Gutman, Alex Franca, Sofia von Humboldt

TL;DR
This study explores factors linked to severe anxiety in older Canadians after the pandemic and the coping strategies they used.
Contribution
The paper identifies specific personal characteristics and coping strategies associated with severe anxiety in older adults post-COVID-19.
Findings
Severely anxious older Canadians were more likely to be female, cisgender women in their 60s with poor health.
Coping strategies like normalizing fear and meditation were more common among those with severe anxiety.
No significant differences in anxiety were found between genders or those living with/without a partner or chronic illness.
Abstract
This study sheds light on the personal characteristics of older Canadians self-identifying as severely anxious and the coping strategies that they gravitated to mitigate their anxiety. Our studied sample consisted of 606 Canadians aged 60 and above who took part in an e-survey across all 10 of Canada’s provinces, launched in July 2022, when social distancing was lifted across the country. Participants completed a personal characteristics questionnaire, the Geriatric Anxiety Scale or GAS-10, and a checklist of everyday coping strategies for mitigating anxiety. A seemingly greater number of severely anxious Canadians were born female, self-identified as a cisgender woman, and were in their 60s and in poor to fair health. A univariate logistic regression analysis revealed that all such personal characteristics were associated with statistically significantly greater odds of experiencing…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCOVID-19 and Mental Health · Resilience and Mental Health · Psychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction
