# Mental and Physical Health of Chinese College Students After Shanghai Lockdown: An Exploratory Study

**Authors:** Jingyu Sun, Rongji Zhao, Antonio Cicchella

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare13151864 · Healthcare · 2025-07-30

## TL;DR

This study explores the mental and physical health of Chinese college students in Shanghai after a lockdown, highlighting gender differences and the need for targeted interventions.

## Contribution

The study provides gender-specific insights into the interplay between stress, sleep, physical activity, and mental health in post-lockdown college students.

## Key findings

- High stress levels and mild insomnia were observed among students post-lockdown.
- Significant gender differences were found in physical fitness and mental health indicators.
- Gender-specific principal components highlight distinct health patterns between males and females.

## Abstract

The mental and physical health of college students, especially in urban environments like Shanghai, is crucial given the high academic and urban stressors, which were intensified by the COVID-19 lockdown. Prior research has shown gender differences in health impacts during public health crises, with females often more vulnerable to mental health issues. Objective: This study aimed to comprehensively assess the physical and psychological health of Chinese college students post-lockdown, focusing on the relationship between stress, anxiety, depression, sleep patterns, and physical health, with a particular emphasis on gender differences. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional study involving 116 students in Shanghai, utilizing psychological scales (HAMA, IPAQ, PSQI, SDS, FS 14, PSS, SF-36) and physical fitness tests (resting heart rate, blood pressure, hand grip, forced vital capacity, standing long jump, sit-and-reach, one-minute sit-up test and the one-minute squat test, single-leg stand test with eyes closed), to analyze health and behavior during the pandemic lockdown. All students have undergone the same life habits during the pandemic. Results: The HAMA scores indicated no significant levels of physical or mental anxiety. The PSS results (42.45 ± 8.93) reflected a high overall stress level. Furthermore, the PSQI scores (5.4 ± 2.91) suggested that the participants experienced mild insomnia. The IPAQ scores indicated higher levels of job-related activity (1261.49 ± 2144.58), transportation activity (1253.65 ± 987.57), walking intensity (1580.78 ± 1412.20), and moderate-intensity activity (1353.03 ± 1675.27) among college students following the lockdown. Hand grip strength (right) (p = 0.001), sit-and-reach test (p = 0.001), standing long jump (p = 0.001), and HAMA total score (p = 0.033) showed significant differences between males and females. Three principal components were identified in males: HAMA, FS14, and PSQI, explaining a total variance of 70.473%. Similarly, three principal components were extracted in females: HAMA, PSQI, and FS14, explaining a total variance of 69.100%. Conclusions: Our study underscores the complex interplay between physical activity (PA), mental health, and quality of life, emphasizing the need for gender-specific interventions. The persistent high stress, poor sleep quality, and reduced PA levels call for a reorganized teaching schedule to enhance student well-being without increasing academic pressure.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MESH:D003866), anxiety (MESH:D001007), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382), insomnia (MESH:D007319)

## Full text

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## References

51 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346089/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12346089