Agorastos Agorastos, Tsamakis Konstantinos, Solmi Marco, Correll Christoph U, Bozikas Vasilis P
Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, 2nd Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece.
Research Associate, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, King's College London, UK.
Psychiatriki. 2021 Apr 19;32(1):15-18. doi: 10.22365/jpsych.2021.010. Epub 2021 Mar 8.
As of the end of 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic has led to over 82 million verified infections and almost 1.8 million COVID-19-related deaths worldwide,1 resulting to an unprecedented public health response around the globe. The COVID-19 pandemic, together with the applied multi-level restrictive measures, has generated a unique combination of an unpredictable and stressful biomedical and socioeconomic environment (i.e., syndemic),2 introducing real-life threat, involuntary and drastic every-day life-style changes with uncertain financial and future prospects, alongside with minimized coping and stress management possibilities.3 This combination of so many different and vital stressors may lead to acute as well as long-term, direct, indirect and even transgenerational unfavourable effects on physical and mental health and functioning, which might even represent the most precarious and still unpredictable public-health-related part of the pandemic.4 Thereby, specific population groups could be at particular risk of poor health outcomes in relation to applied public health measures.4, 5 However, not every individual will experience the same level of negative impact on health and well-being during the pandemic, as several additional national, socioeconomic, environmental, behavioural, emotional and cognitive factors can moderate individual resilience and coping.6 Pandemic-related research should, thus, assess as many multidimensional risk and protective factors as possible in a longitudinal, large-scale and multi-national manner, enabling a profound and comprehensive understanding of the complex health and societal impact of the pandemic worldwide.7 Nevertheless, to date, most research findings are cross-sectional, report on small and non- representative samples from individual countries, or on specific population groups (e.g., health care workers, students, clinical populations) and usually assess only a very restricted set of outcomes and time-points. Thereby, only few studies assess coping strategies, medical history or detailed socioeconomic, demographic and environmental data. In addition, most studies leave behind linguistic differences, being available in one or at best two different languages. Such investigations of small outcome subsets within a narrow framework preclude a broader and clear understanding of the multifaceted pandemic impact on the general population and specific subgroups. Acknowledging these gaps in the existing literature, large- scale, collaborative research prospectively collecting and monitoring a broad range of real- time, multi-dimensional health-related, societal and behavioural outcome data from countries across the globe is currently explicitly needed. The Collaborative Outcomes study on Health and Functioning during Infection Times (COH- FIT) envisions to fill this gap. Based on an easy-to-access webpage (www.coh-fit.com), COH- FIT is the currently largest-scale known international collaborative study of over 200 researchers around the globe, prospectively collecting the biggest set of multi-dimensional and multi-disciplinary data from 150 high, middle, and low-income countries in over 30 languages and in three different age groups (adults, adolescents, children) of the general population, focusing also on relevant at-risk subgroups. Albeit being a cross-sectional anonymous survey on an individual level, it is a longitudinal study on a population level, as data are collected continuously since April 2020 and until the WHO declares the end of the pandemic. In addition to snowball recruitment, this project also collects information from nationally representative samples. Furthermore, COH-FIT is the first study of this scale investigating pandemic effects on health and functioning measures between family members, while it also specifically assesses a large list of behavioral and coping factors (e.g., screen time, social media usage, physical activity, social interaction, religious practices, etc.) on outcomes of interest. COH-FIT also monitors changes in public health restrictive measures to enhance data harmonization across nations and time, and to better investigate their impact on physical and mental health, while it also collects information on changes in healthcare systems functioning. The COH-FIT project was worldwide first initiated in Greece after the ethics committee approval of the School of Medicine of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki and is officially supported by the Hellenic Psychiatric Association, European Psychiatric Association, World Association of Social Psychiatry, ECNP Network on the Prevention of Mental Disorders and Mental Health Promotion, among many other national and international scientific associations. To date, COH-FIT has already collected >115,000 participations worldwide (>8,000 in Greece), but more participants are still needed, both during the second and third wave of the pandemic, as in the future, after the pandemic has ended. Currently, the COH-FIT survey actively collects the largest sample on multifactorial data on the impact of the COVD-19 pandemic on health and functioning not only in Greece, but around the globe. The elaborated design of COH-FIT and similar studies may allow a better identification of key parameters and population groups at increased risk during the pandemic, as well as potential targets for acute and long-term prevention or intervention strategies in the current as in possible future pandemics. A profound understanding of the health and societal impact of the pandemic could facilitate an optimized governmental, social and individual health preparedness during infection times8 and the bridging of individuals', societal and systemic needs and actions through multi-level guideline development with the aim to improve mental health outcomes globally.
截至2020年底,新冠疫情已导致全球超过8200万例确诊感染病例和近180万例与新冠病毒相关的死亡病例,引发了全球前所未有的公共卫生应对行动。新冠疫情以及所采取的多层次限制措施,形成了一种不可预测且充满压力的生物医学和社会经济环境(即综合征)的独特组合,带来了现实生活中的威胁、非自愿且剧烈的日常生活方式改变,同时伴有不确定的经济状况和未来前景,以及应对和压力管理可能性的最小化。如此众多不同且关键的压力源组合,可能对身心健康及功能产生急性和长期、直接、间接甚至跨代的不利影响,这甚至可能是疫情中最不稳定且仍无法预测的公共卫生相关部分。因此,特定人群在实施公共卫生措施方面可能面临健康状况不佳的特殊风险。然而,并非每个个体在疫情期间都会对健康和幸福产生相同程度的负面影响,因为还有若干其他国家、社会经济、环境、行为、情感和认知因素可以调节个体的复原力和应对能力。因此,与疫情相关的研究应以纵向、大规模和跨国的方式评估尽可能多的多维风险和保护因素,以便对全球疫情的复杂健康和社会影响有深刻而全面的理解。尽管如此,迄今为止,大多数研究结果都是横断面的,报告的是来自个别国家的小样本且不具代表性的样本,或特定人群(如医护人员、学生、临床人群)的样本,并且通常只评估非常有限的一组结果和时间点。因此,只有少数研究评估应对策略、病史或详细的社会经济、人口和环境数据。此外,大多数研究没有考虑语言差异,仅以一种或至多两种不同语言提供。在狭窄框架内对小结果子集的此类调查妨碍了对疫情对一般人群和特定亚组的多方面影响有更广泛和清晰的理解。认识到现有文献中的这些差距,目前明确需要进行大规模、合作性研究,前瞻性地收集和监测来自全球各国的广泛实时、多维健康相关、社会和行为结果数据。感染时期健康与功能协作结果研究(COH-FIT)旨在填补这一空白。基于一个易于访问的网页(www.coh-fit.com),COH-FIT是目前全球规模最大的国际合作研究,由全球200多名研究人员参与,前瞻性地从150个高、中、低收入国家收集最大规模的多维和多学科数据,涵盖30多种语言以及一般人群的三个不同年龄组(成年人、青少年、儿童),同时也关注相关的高危亚组。尽管这是一项个体层面的横断面匿名调查,但在人群层面上是一项纵向研究,因为自2020年4月以来一直在持续收集数据,直至世界卫生组织宣布疫情结束。除了通过滚雪球式招募外,该项目还从具有全国代表性的样本中收集信息。此外,COH-FIT是第一项如此规模的研究,调查疫情对家庭成员之间健康和功能指标的影响,同时它还专门评估了大量行为和应对因素(如屏幕使用时间、社交媒体使用、体育活动、社交互动、宗教活动等)对感兴趣结果的影响。COH-FIT还监测公共卫生限制措施的变化,以加强各国和不同时间的数据协调,并更好地调查其对身心健康的影响,同时它还收集医疗系统功能变化的信息。COH-FIT项目在希腊塞萨洛尼基亚里士多德大学医学院伦理委员会批准后于全球率先在希腊启动,并得到希腊精神病学协会、欧洲精神病学协会、世界社会精神病学协会、欧洲神经精神药理学会预防精神障碍和促进精神健康网络等众多其他国家和国际科学协会的官方支持。迄今为止,COH-FIT已在全球收集了超过115,000份参与数据(希腊超过8000份),但在疫情的第二波和第三波期间以及疫情结束后的未来,仍需要更多参与者。目前,COH-FIT调查正在积极收集关于新冠疫情对健康和功能影响的多因素数据的最大样本,不仅在希腊,而且在全球范围内。COH-FIT以及类似研究的精心设计,可能有助于更好地识别疫情期间风险增加的关键参数和人群,以及当前和未来可能疫情中急性和长期预防或干预策略的潜在目标。对疫情的健康和社会影响有深刻理解,有助于在感染时期优化政府、社会和个人的健康准备,并通过制定多层次指南来弥合个人、社会和系统的需求与行动之间的差距,以改善全球心理健康结果。