- 1Center for Neurocognition, Epistemology and Theoretical Syntax (NETS), Scuola Universitaria Superiore IUSS Pavia, Pavia, Italy
- 2IRCCS Mondino Foundation, Pavia, Italy
- 3Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS, Pavia, Italy
- 4Center for Neurocognitive Rehabilitation—CIMeC, University of Trento, Rovereto, Italy
- 5Department of Brain and Behavioral Sciences, University of Pavia, Pavia, Italy
The Covid-19 pandemic is burning all over the world. National healthcare systems are facing the contagion with incredible strength, but concern regarding the psychosocial and economic effects is growing quickly. The PsyCovid Study assessed the influence of psychosocial variables on individual differences from the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on the issues of health and economy in the Italian population. Italian volunteers from different regions completed an online anonymous survey. The main outcomes were the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on health and the economy. A two-way MANOVA evaluated differences in the main outcomes, with geographical area (northern, central, and southern regions) and professional status (healthcare workers or not) as factors. We then tested the relationship linking psychosocial variables (i.e. perceived distress and social isolation, empathy, and coping style) to the main outcomes through two different mediation models. 1163 responders completed the survey (835 females; mean age: 42 ± 13.5 y.o.; age range: 18-81 y.o.) between March 14 and 21, 2020. Healthcare workers and people living in northern Italy reported a significantly worse outbreak impact on health, but not on the economy. In the whole sample, distress and loneliness were key variables influencing the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on health, while empathy and coping style affected the perceived impact on the economy. The Covid-19 pandemic is a worldwide emergency in terms of psychological, social, and economic consequences. Our data suggests that in the Italian population, actual differences in individual perception of the Covid-19 outbreak severity for health are dramatically modulated by psychosocial frailty (i.e., distress and loneliness). At the same time, problem-oriented coping strategies and enhanced empathic abilities increase people's awareness of the severity of the impact of the Covid-19 emergency on economics. There is an immediate need for consensus guidelines and healthcare policies to support interventions aimed to manage psychosocial distress and increase population resilience towards the imminent crisis.
Introduction
In late 2019, pneumonia cases of an unknown etiology, then proven to be caused by a new coronavirus (2019-nCOV or SARS-CoV2), appeared in Wuhan, Hubei Province of China. The first clusters of patients were epidemiologically linked to human-animal transmission in the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market of Wuhan. At the end of December 2019, the World Health Organization (WHO) was alerted of the novel viral illness that caused respiratory symptomatology which sometimes resulted in severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) (1, 2). The first two cases in Italy, a couple of Chinese tourists, were registered in Rome (3) at the end of January 2020. Later they were proved to be infected prior to their arrival in Italy (4). Specific algorithms and protocols were then applied, and specialized teams were instituted, in order to control the contagion spread (5). However, a dramatic increase of positive cases and hospitalizations quickly followed, especially in Northern Italy. After the confirmation of 2019-nCov positivity of the two Chinese tourists admitted at the Spallanzani Hospital in Rome on February 21, 2020, the Italian government declared a state of emergency (6). Extraordinary measures to prevent the virus spread were instituted only on March 9, 2020 (DCPM #iorestoacasa – I stay at home), and further hardened on March 13, 20, and 22, 2020. At that time, social distancing became extreme and unprecedented (Figure 1). A daily press release system was established and educational campaigns were launched, in order to sensitize and encourage people to undertake contact precautions and avoid the contagion. The Covid-19 outbreak disruptively changed habits, routines, and lifestyles, affecting human relationships and the productivity of the entire country. Roads and streets were deserted and the suspicion of infection from others is high. At the time of the last revision of this manuscript (May 13, 2020) in Italy there were 222.104 confirmed case and 31.106 deaths.
Figure 1 Italian ghost towns. The figure illustrates the effect of social distance measures in the Italian cities of Milan, Pavia, Venice, Rome, and Palermo.
A few days after March 9, 2020, we started the PsyCOVID longitudinal study. We designed this psychosocial research study, taking into account three key requirements to test the impact of infectious diseases (7): i) a systemic perspective, directed to the general public, designed to be as inclusive as possible; ii) a prospective outlook, including a baseline assessment during the social restrictive measures and two follow-ups (the first a month after the abolition of these measures, and the second six months after the first follow-up); iii) measurable outcomes of psychosocial variables, suitable to detect fragile sub-populations who would benefit from specific interventions at the end of the outbreak.
Indeed, extreme social restrictions like social distancing, as well as emergency situations and settings that healthcare professionals have to face every day, require individuals to allocate enormous resources to the process of psychosocial adjustment to such a novel and catastrophic situation, which in the long-term may exert a critical impact on individuals' well-being, mental health, and quality of life. In such a context, increased distress and loneliness, possibly emerging as a result of social isolation, can profoundly affect our perception of events and, importantly, may exacerbate the risk of negative mental health outcomes, including the emergence or the worsening of anxious and depressive symptoms, addictive behaviors, thought disorders, as well as the increase of the risk of suicide (8).
At the same time, effective coping strategies and empathic abilities can help individuals to enhance their awareness of the problem, build resilience, and increase social responsibility, and thus face such a complex situation in a more constructive way.
In this paper, we report findings on the baseline assessment of the PsyCOVID study aiming at evaluating differences in the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on health and economy in the Italian population during the very first days of the extreme social distancing measures, specifically taking into account the impact of demographic variables, regional differences (Northern, Central, and Southern regions), and professional status (healthcare workers or not).
Participants and Methods
Participants
Between Mar 14 and 21, 2020, we conducted an anonymous online survey among adult Italian residents. Study protocol was approved by the University Ethics Committee (IUSS—University of Pavia). We selected convenience sampling, selecting participants based on their accessibility and proximity to the research group. We created the survey using Google Forms and distributed it through a link, accessible to anyone (https://forms.gle/5f3yH3aTNJYEuJ7B9). We distributed the survey link via written invitations through e-mails, Whatsapp, and social network messaging (Facebook, Instagram, and Linkedin). Then, we asked initial participants to diffuse the questionnaire through their social networks. The eligibility criteria were age (18 years of age or older), ability to provide an informed consent, and place of residence (Italy). At the beginning of the survey, we presented the study objective and timeline, the commitment required of participants, and information about the research team. We asked potential participants to read and provide their informed consent by clicking a box. After providing informed consent, participants were directed to the survey. We first invited all participants to provide a reference in order to be contacted for the following phases. Participants did not receive any incentive to take part in the study. The response rate was 98%. We calculated the rate response as the ratio of the number of complete responders to the total number of potential participants who had the chance to access the first page of the study. Non-responders were persons who did not provide their informed consent to participate or who declared an age < 18 years old.
A total of 1,163 adult Italian residents completed the survey (72% females; mean age: 42 ± 13.5 y.o.; age range: 18–81 y.o.). The majority (65.6%) of participants were residents in Northern Italy, 9.6% in Central Italy, and 24.8% in Southern Italy. Of all responders, 14.3% were healthcare professionals. Table 1 provides details about the socio-demographic characteristics of the sample.
Measures
The questionnaire collected data on socio-demographic characteristics (Table 1), an assessment about the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on health and the economy (main outcome measures), and psychosocial factors.
Outcome Measures: Assessment of the Perceived Impact of Covid-19 Outbreak
We assessed the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak with 4 items for health (average interitem covariance=0.34; Cronbach's alpha or α = 0.74) and 4 items for the economy (average interitem covariance=0.31; α = 0.81). Items on both the health and economy scales required participants to rate the perceived severity of the Covid-19 outbreak at the local (item 1: city or town), regional (item 2), and global (item 3: national; item 4: international) levels, on a 5-point Likert scale (0=not serious at all; 4=extremely serious). Finally, for each scale we created an index (range 0-16), obtained by summing up the item ratings within each scale. We used the resulting measures as outcome variables in our subsequent analyses.
Psychosocial Predictors
In the PsyCOVID study we decided to evaluate a set of specific psychosocial dimensions related to emergency settings and situations, including perceived global distress (9, 10), loneliness (10), empathic skills (11, 12), and coping strategies (13). To collect information about these psychosocial dimensions we used a battery of validated questionnaires in the Italian language. In particular, we assessed the different facets of global distress with the Italian version of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales-21 (14), allowing participants to obtain specific sub-scores of depression, anxiety, and stress. We used the Empathic Concern and Perspective Taking sub-scales of the Interpersonal Reactivity Index [IRI (15)] to capture emotional and cognitive facets of empathic abilities. Loneliness was assessed with the Italian Loneliness Scale (16), including the three sub-scales (Emotional, Social, and General Loneliness). Finally, coping strategies were investigated with the short version of the Italian version of the Coping Orientation to the Problems Experienced [COPE-NVI-25 (17)], measuring different coping behaviors or styles towards problems and stressful events, reflected in 5 scale sub-scores (Positive attitude, Problem orientation, Transcendence orientation, Social support, Avoidance strategies).
Statistical Analysis
Since fewer than 2% of cases were missing in any analysis, we dropped cases with missing values via list-wise deletion. We set statistical significance at p <0.05 for all statistical tests we performed. We calculated descriptive statistics including frequencies and percentages for categorical variables, and mean and standard deviation for pseudo-continuous variables. We estimated group differences in the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on health and the economy dimensions with a two-way MANOVA, considering geographical area (northern, central, and southern regions) and professional status (healthcare professionals vs. non-healthcare professionals) as factors. We additionally described between-group differences on psychosocial variables, with geographical area (one-way ANOVA) and professional status (Student's t-test) as grouping variables in separate analyses. We then explored the correlations (Pearson's r coefficient) between psychosocial variables and main outcomes.
Finally, based on correlation results, we tested two mediation models. The first (Model 1) tested the indirect effect of perceived distress (Stress subscale of the DASS-21) on the relationship between loneliness (General Loneliness subscale of the ILS) and the perceived impact of Covid-19 outbreak on health. The second mediation model (Model 2) assessed the indirect effect of coping style (Problem orientation sub-score) on the relationship between empathic skills (Composite score of Empathic Concern and Perspective taking sub-scales of the IRI) and the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on the economy.
We carried out sample description and statistical group analyses using SPSS (https://www.spss.it/), and tested mediation models using STATA (https://www.stata.com/).
Results
Descriptive statistics are illustrated in Tables 1 and 2 and in Figure 2.
Figure 2 Mediation analyses. The figure illustrates the two mediation models tested for the main outcomes related to the perceived impact of the COVID-19 outbreak for Health (Model 1, Panel A) and for Economy (Model 2, Panel B). Model 1 assessed the mediation effect of perceived distress (DASS-21 Stress sub-scale) on the relationship between perceived loneliness (ILS General Loneliness sub-scale) and the perceived impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on health. Model 2 assessed the mediation effect of problem-oriented coping strategies (COPE-NVI-25 Problem orientation sub-scale) on the relationship between empathy (IRI Empathic concern and Perspective Taking sub-scales) and the perceived impact of the COVID-19 outbreak on the economy. Figure acronyms: IV, Independent variable; DV, Dependent variable; M, mediator.
The two-way MANOVA showed a significant multivariate effect of both geographic area (Λ=0.955 F(4, 2308)=13.582, p<0.001) and professional status (Λ=0.991 F(2, 1154)=5.042, p=0.007) on the perceived severity of the Covid-19 outbreak. However, the interaction between geographic area and professional status was not significant (Λ=0.996; F(4, 2308)=1.031, p=0.390). Univariate results revealed that both geographic area and professional status had a significant effect on the perceived severity for health (geographic area: F(2, 1161)=19.391, p<0.001; professional status: F(2,1161)=30.920, p=0.035), but not for the economy (geographic area: F(2, 1161)=0.231, p=0.794; professional status: F(2,1161)=0.874, p=0.350).
Post hoc tests (Tukey HSD) on geographical area showed the perceived severity for health in northern Italy was significantly different from that of central (p<0.001) and southern regions (p<0.001). The perceived outbreak impact on health was significantly higher (i.e., more serious) in healthcare workers and in people living in northern Italy, compared to non-healthcare workers and people living in central-southern Italian regions.
Group comparisons on all psychosocial variables by professional status did not show significant results (Table 2). The same was true for group comparisons based on geographical area, with the exception of coping strategies reflecting transcendence orientation, which characterize southern regions more than central (Tukey HSD, p=0.001) and northern ones (Tukey HSD, p<0.001).
Correlation analyses assessing the relationship between main outcomes and psychosocial variables are reported in Table 3. Several variables were significantly related to one or both study outcomes. On this basis, we selected a small set of variables to test two mediation models. In Model 1 (Figure 2A), we tested the mediation effect of perceived distress – positively correlated to the dependent variable and negatively with the independent variable – on the positive relationship linking general loneliness (independent variable) and the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak for health (dependent variable) (direct effect: Z=-4.32, p<0.001). Results highlighted a significant indirect effect of perceived distress (Z=4.50 p<0.001), mediating approximately 48% of the total effect of loneliness on the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak for health. In Model 2 (Figure 2B), we tested the mediation effect of problem-oriented coping strategies – positively correlated with both the dependent and the independent variables – on the positive relationship linking empathic skills (independent variable) and the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak on the economy (dependent variable) (direct effect: Z=2.37, p=0.02). Results highlighted a significant indirect effect of problem-oriented coping (Z=2.81, p=0.005), making up approximately 34% of the total effect of perceived social isolation on the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak for health.
Discussion
The Covid-19 pandemic seems at present to be unstoppable, effecting countries all over the world. Although Italy is facing this extremely stressful situation with all the available weapons and tools, severe concern has arisen regarding the Italian national health system's capacity to take the brunt of any subsequent psychosocial and economic implications. To this purpose, recent data highlighted that a significant proportion of the Italian general population may have moderate-to-severe psychological distress during the early phases of the Covid-19 emergency (18).
In line with this evidence, baseline findings of the PsyCOVID study suggest that Covid-19 will represent a psychosocial catastrophe. On the one side, healthcare workers face the emergency not only at the physical level, as they are continuously exposed to the contagion and engaged in patient assistance and care, but they have to cope with a huge psychosocial burden. This requires healthcare professionals to put into play enormous resources to adapt themselves to the new dystopic situation, managing the increasing distress while trying to bring out the most effective coping strategy. On the other side, quarantine and other social distancing measures imposed by Italian authorities to the majority of the population can exacerbate feelings of loneliness and lack of connectedness in socially fragile individuals, as well as enhance the risk of negative mental health outcomes (8).
As with the SARS outbreak (19, 20), persistent psychological symptoms will affect healthcare personnel and outbreak survivors, families of affected patients, quarantined fragile individuals, and socially disadvantaged sub-populations (i.e., subjects affected by chronic disease, elderly population with mild cognitive impairments, aged people without close relatives). However, literature reports only a few studies investigating psychological variables related to the Covid-19 spread. Wang and co-workers (21) provided evidence of a moderate to severe psychological impact of the outbreak in more than half of Chinese respondents, with 16.5% of interviewed individuals having moderate to severe depressive symptoms, 28.8% moderate to severe anxiety symptoms, and 8.1% moderate to severe stress levels. Li et al. (22) reported self-control as a resilience factor potentially mitigating the perceived severity of the Covid-19 outbreak and mental health problems. Moccia and colleagues reported that the mental health burden due to the Covid-19 outbreak may be predicted by temperament and adult attachment style (8).
Here we provided a first look at the psychosocial effects that the Covid-19 outbreak is having in Italy, in the very first days after the Italian Government Decree #iorestoacasa of March 9, 2020. Our results about the perceived impact of the Covid-19 outbreak suggest that while the economy emergency is viewed as equally serious in all Italian regions and in both healthcare and non-healthcare workers, the health emergency is tightly linked to the professional status and the geographical spread of the Covid-19 outbreak. As expected, healthcare workers who have to deal with suffering and deaths day by day judged the health emergency as more serious than people not involved in Covid-19 patients assistance and care. At the same time, individuals living in Northern Italy—who are dramatically facing illness and suffering of close relatives and friends—felt the health emergency as more urgent than what individuals living in Central and Southern regions did.
Notably, we provided evidence that the severity of perception of the Covid-19 emergency reflected the individuals' psychosocial vulnerability. First, increased perceived social support (i.e., a low degree of loneliness) was significantly correlated to the increased perception of the Covid-19 impact on health. This suggests that the greater an individual's support network, is the worse (i.e., more serious) his/her judgment about the Covid-19 consequences for health will be. In other terms, having more people in our own social network increases the probability to have examples of positive or probable cases in mind [feeding the so-called representativeness heuristic (23)] and, thus, to consider the current emergency as more serious. This is particularly true for healthcare professionals who are continuously and physically in touch with patients and colleagues. However, such a relationship is mediated by perceived distress, contributing to nearly half of the total effect of loneliness on the perception of the Covid-19 impact on health.
Model 2 highlighted that better empathic skills (i.e., how much better I can understand others' emotions and point of view) are related to a more serious perception of the Covid-19 impact on the economy. Such a result indicates that a profound understanding of what the restrictive measures mean for Italian entrepreneurs and organizations generates a more serious judgment of the impact of Covid-19 on the Italian economy. Interestingly, we observed that a third of the effect is mediated by problem-oriented coping strategies. This indicates that a way of facing problems based on active strategies, planning, and focused efforts towards problem resolution makes people more aware of the imminent crisis and gets them prepared to face the economic disaster (e.g. industrial conversion of activities to produce goods currently in high demand). Interestingly, a previous report on the psychosocial impact of global infection outbreaks, including the SARS and the West Nile Virus, showed that the perceived threat of these diseases were related with different coping strategies, also including empathic responding (24). In particular, the authors underlined that empathic responding is associated to an individual engagement in recommended health precautions and in the avoidance of behaviors entailing detrimental social and economical consequences. In this light, more empathic individuals may also display a higher adherence to the imposed measures, in order to prevent the contagion spread.
Crucially, psychosocial variables here investigated represent modifiable factors. The scientific literature provides a large range of intervention strategies and programs for each single domain (25–30). Of course, the day-by-day accurate reporting of the status of the epidemic and experts' opinion guidance on prevention and infection control play important roles in stabilizing people and overcoming the epidemic-related crisis. Actively mobilizing the population to participate in epidemic prevention and control can help to alleviate social anxiety and the feeling of helplessness and strengthen the sense of membership to a large community despite the physical distance and isolation due to restrictive measures. However, real-time updates of information on outbreak effects without more hopeful news to counteract this could be detrimental in the long time. This is the reason why, in such a catastrophic context, there is an urgent need to develop evidence-driven and multi-faceted intervention strategies to reduce adverse psychological impacts and psychosocial distress during, and especially after, the Covid-19 outbreak. Comparably, consensus guidelines to orient physicians, psychologists, and other mental care professionals toward an effective unified approach are urgent. The present work provides important suggestions that may help in defining new intervention programs. Our data, indeed, might help the government and health authorities to evaluate how and where to allocate resources in the future, including personnel, services, care facilities, and interventions, to manage the situation in the coming months and years.
Some criticisms in this report have to be underlined. First, we collected data via a self-administered survey, and thus possible issues might be related to recall bias and the intrinsic limitations of self-report measures. Secondly, the convenience sampling might have affected the generalizability of the present findings, as the sample cannot be considered actually representative of the Italian population. Another limitation is related to the cross-sectional nature of our report, which prevents the observation of changes of participants' perceptions of the Covid-19 impact over time. However, we are going to overcome such an issue by reporting longitudinal data after the planned follow-up assessment, once all the socially restrictive measures in Italy will definitively end. Moreover, we have to underline that, despite having confirmed our initial predictions by showing that the perceived impact of Covid-19 on health and the economy is affected by different psychosocial predictors, including distress and loneliness as well as empathic and coping abilities, there was the possibility that the opposite is also true. Further studies can address such a specific issue. Finally, future analyses will also benefit from taking into account the socio-economic status of participants, a variable that may be crucial to better understand individual differences in perceptions and psychosocial profiles.
In conclusion, only time will tell us whether Italian quarantine measures have prevented a historical disaster. However, the costs of the outbreak are not limited to medical aspects, as the virus has led to significant social, psychological, and economic effects globally. Our data teaches us the need to invest in preparedness to prevent, rapidly identify, and contain mid- and long-term consequences of global health emergency outbreaks such as Covid-19. Although reacting with travel bans and quarantines costs effort and economic resources and impacts on the well-being of millions of individuals cordoned off in a zone of contagion, it is reasonably necessary to contain further disasters. The psychological weight of thousands of suspected and confirmed Covid-19 cases and of huge numbers of deaths is difficult to bear without a known successful scenario. People are suffering from the weight of having a limited access to social or psychological support, as well as from not seeing a future constructive outlook.
In this view, big data analyses should analyze public health risks in the future in order to adjust health care strategies that could be implemented for any future crisis. We all need to move in this direction in order to understand and control the disease now and its effects later. Memories of the numbers of affected and diseased people will probably wane but psychosocial consequences will last. This modern war has just begun.
Data Availability Statement
The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
Ethics Statement
The studies involving human participants were reviewed and approved by the University of Pavia and IUSS Pavia Ethics Committee. The patients/participants provided their written informed consent to participate in this study.
Author Contributions
CCe, GS, CG, CCr: conception and design of the work. CCe, GS, CG, AD, CCr: acquisition, analysis of data. CCe, AD, SC, TV, CCr: interpretation of data. CCe, CCr: drafting the work. CCe, GS, CG, AD, SC, TV, CCr: revising and providing the final approval of the work.
Conflict of Interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank all the subjects who contributed to the study. We thank Pigmento-LAB ETS members for their help in survey sharing. We thank William Dello Russo, Valentina Grillo, Carla Cerami, and Maria Rosaria Gorgone for their suggestions for the implementation of the online questionnaire. We would like to thank Luca Casucci for his support on epidemiologic data. We are grateful to Simona Albertini, Barbara Bianco, Maria Capovilla, Tommaso Ebhardt, and Tania Scarpellini for city photographs.
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Keywords: Covid-19 outbreak, perceived impact on health, economic crisis, psychosocial frailty, loneliness, empathy, distress, coping abilities
Citation: Cerami C, Santi GC, Galandra C, Dodich A, Cappa SF, Vecchi T and Crespi C (2020) Covid-19 Outbreak In Italy: Are We Ready for the Psychosocial and the Economic Crisis? Baseline Findings From the PsyCovid Study. Front. Psychiatry 11:556. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00556
Received: 16 April 2020; Accepted: 01 June 2020;
Published: 10 June 2020.
Edited by:
Antonio Ventriglio, University of Foggia, ItalyReviewed by:
Luigi Janiri, Catholic University of the Sacred Heart, ItalyAnita DeLongis, University of British Columbia, Canada
Copyright © 2020 Cerami, Santi, Galandra, Dodich, Cappa, Vecchi and Crespi. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Chiara Crespi, chiara.crespi@unipv.it