2020 was not good for America's mental health, study confirms

A new study published in the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA) confirms that 2020 sucked.

“There is a collective grief going on right now,” Maureen Sayres Van Niel, a Massachusetts-based psychiatrist and president of the American Psychiatric Association Women’s Caucus, told Yahoo Finance. “It’s a national trauma and we’re all suffering at some level. It’s a matter of how much.”

The research, based on a survey of 5,186 American respondents from August 28 to September 6, 2020, found that nearly 12% of adults surveyed seriously considered suicide in the prior month while 29.6% reported COVID-19-related trauma- and stressor-related disorder symptoms, 33% reported anxiety or depression symptoms, and more than 15% reported increased substance use.

Resources: National Suicide Prevention Lifeline: 1-800-273-TALK for English, 1-888-628-9454 for Spanish, or Lifeline Crisis Chat.

“There are a lot of different potential challenges right now, spanning from concerns related to COVID-19 and the impact of having the disease or knowing people who have had it or died from it, to the uncertainty of the duration of the pandemic and the mitigation policies required to contain it, joblessness, food or housing insecurities, loneliness, systemic racism, exhaustion, and more,” Mark Czeisler, a Fulbright Scholar studying in Australia and research trainee at Brigham and Women’s Hospital who was one of the co-authors for the report, told Yahoo Finance.

Adverse mental health symptoms only got worse. (Chart: JAMA)
Adverse mental health symptoms only got worse. (Chart: JAMA)

Different types of emotional distress

The new survey was a follow-up to a June 2020 study, which also found that many Americans were struggling amid the coronavirus pandemic and the resulting economic turmoil, mass death, and record unemployment.

The prevalence of adverse mental and behavioral health conditions increased in every category. Students and essential workers were significantly more likely to report some kind of adverse mental health symptoms than any other group featured in the survey.

Resources: Disaster Distress Helpline: 1-800-985-5990 (press 2 for Spanish) or text TalkWithUs for English or Hablanos for Spanish to 66746. Spanish speakers from Puerto Rico can text Hablanos to 1-787-339-2663.

Sayres Van Niel explained that it’s a matter of emotional distress that people are feeling in general during the pandemic and those who have a history of emotional distress that is exacerbated by the pandemic.

“Those with previous mental conditions, they are suffering much more than usual and having much more symptomatology because they can’t get the usual treatments they use to keep themselves healthy,” she said. “Some of them take medicine or medicines, some of them go to groups, some of them see a therapist. And in some of the communities, getting on board with telemedicine has not been easy. There are many patients, particularly patients in minority and lower-income communities, who just can’t get the services they usually need for their illnesses.”