Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study

Background Coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) is a highly infectious disease prompting extreme containment measures, including lockdown, travel restrictions, social distancing, and stringent personal hygiene. This study investigates the depression level and coping responses toward the lockdown, ref...

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Main Authors: Yee, Hway Anne, Hodori, Nur `Aqilah Mohd, Tung, Yu-Zhen, Ooi, Po-Lin, Latif, Saiful Adni B. Abdul, Isa, Husna Md, Ng, Diana-Leh-Ching, Chai, Chee-Shee, Tan, Seng-Beng
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Published: BMC 2021
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spelling my.um.eprints.342972022-06-13T00:54:24Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/34297/ Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study Yee, Hway Anne Hodori, Nur `Aqilah Mohd Tung, Yu-Zhen Ooi, Po-Lin Latif, Saiful Adni B. Abdul Isa, Husna Md Ng, Diana-Leh-Ching Chai, Chee-Shee Tan, Seng-Beng RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry Background Coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) is a highly infectious disease prompting extreme containment measures, including lockdown, travel restrictions, social distancing, and stringent personal hygiene. This study investigates the depression level and coping responses toward the lockdown, referred as the movement control order (MCO) during COVID-19 pandemic in Malaysia and its impact on quality of life. Method This cross-sectional study was conducted from April to May 2020. The outcomes were assessed using the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21, Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory, and World Health Organisation Quality of Life-BREF Scale (WHOQOL-BREF) in both English and validated Malay versions. Results Mild-to-severe depression was found in 28.2% (n = 149) of the 528 respondents. Respondents with mild-to-severe depression were significantly younger (33.09 +/- 10.08 versus 36.79 +/- 12.47 years), without partner (71.8% versus 45.6%), lived in the red zone (85.9% versus 71.0%), and had lower household income as defined in the category of B40 (51.7% versus 39.3%) compared to those without depression (all p < 0.01). The avoidant coping score was significantly higher (25.43 +/- 5.69 versus 20.78 +/- 5.65), while the religious coping score was significantly lower (5.10 +/- 2.07 versus 5.94 +/- 2.11) among those with mild-to-severe depression compared to those without depression (both p < 0.001). Respondents with mild-to-severe depression also had significantly lower mean score in each domain of WHOQOL-BREF compare to those without depression (physical health, 13.63 +/- 2.66 versus 16.20 +/- 2.11), (psychological, 12.5 +/- 2.79 versus 16.10 +/- 2.14), (social relationships, 12.17 +/- 3.49 versus 15.28 +/- 2.93), environment (14.50 +/- 2.39 versus 16.21 +/- 2.14), all p < 0.001] after controlling for age, marital status, zone, household income, and coping scores. Conclusion COVID-19 lockdown had adverse mental health effects. Our study highlighted that approximately one in three individual experienced mild-to-severe depression during the nationwide MCO. The varied impact of the pandemic on mental health could be due to different population characteristics and coping strategies used. Identifying those at higher risk to develop depression during MCO for COVID-19 pandemic could help mental healthcare service providers to plan services for those susceptible, thereby mitigating the pandemic's effect on quality of life. BMC 2021-05-24 Article PeerReviewed Yee, Hway Anne and Hodori, Nur `Aqilah Mohd and Tung, Yu-Zhen and Ooi, Po-Lin and Latif, Saiful Adni B. Abdul and Isa, Husna Md and Ng, Diana-Leh-Ching and Chai, Chee-Shee and Tan, Seng-Beng (2021) Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study. Annals of General Psychiatry, 20 (1). ISSN 1744-859X, DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s12991-021-00352-4 <https://doi.org/10.1186/s12991-021-00352-4>. 10.1186/s12991-021-00352-4
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
spellingShingle RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
Yee, Hway Anne
Hodori, Nur `Aqilah Mohd
Tung, Yu-Zhen
Ooi, Po-Lin
Latif, Saiful Adni B. Abdul
Isa, Husna Md
Ng, Diana-Leh-Ching
Chai, Chee-Shee
Tan, Seng-Beng
Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
description Background Coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) is a highly infectious disease prompting extreme containment measures, including lockdown, travel restrictions, social distancing, and stringent personal hygiene. This study investigates the depression level and coping responses toward the lockdown, referred as the movement control order (MCO) during COVID-19 pandemic in Malaysia and its impact on quality of life. Method This cross-sectional study was conducted from April to May 2020. The outcomes were assessed using the Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21, Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced Inventory, and World Health Organisation Quality of Life-BREF Scale (WHOQOL-BREF) in both English and validated Malay versions. Results Mild-to-severe depression was found in 28.2% (n = 149) of the 528 respondents. Respondents with mild-to-severe depression were significantly younger (33.09 +/- 10.08 versus 36.79 +/- 12.47 years), without partner (71.8% versus 45.6%), lived in the red zone (85.9% versus 71.0%), and had lower household income as defined in the category of B40 (51.7% versus 39.3%) compared to those without depression (all p < 0.01). The avoidant coping score was significantly higher (25.43 +/- 5.69 versus 20.78 +/- 5.65), while the religious coping score was significantly lower (5.10 +/- 2.07 versus 5.94 +/- 2.11) among those with mild-to-severe depression compared to those without depression (both p < 0.001). Respondents with mild-to-severe depression also had significantly lower mean score in each domain of WHOQOL-BREF compare to those without depression (physical health, 13.63 +/- 2.66 versus 16.20 +/- 2.11), (psychological, 12.5 +/- 2.79 versus 16.10 +/- 2.14), (social relationships, 12.17 +/- 3.49 versus 15.28 +/- 2.93), environment (14.50 +/- 2.39 versus 16.21 +/- 2.14), all p < 0.001] after controlling for age, marital status, zone, household income, and coping scores. Conclusion COVID-19 lockdown had adverse mental health effects. Our study highlighted that approximately one in three individual experienced mild-to-severe depression during the nationwide MCO. The varied impact of the pandemic on mental health could be due to different population characteristics and coping strategies used. Identifying those at higher risk to develop depression during MCO for COVID-19 pandemic could help mental healthcare service providers to plan services for those susceptible, thereby mitigating the pandemic's effect on quality of life.
format Article
author Yee, Hway Anne
Hodori, Nur `Aqilah Mohd
Tung, Yu-Zhen
Ooi, Po-Lin
Latif, Saiful Adni B. Abdul
Isa, Husna Md
Ng, Diana-Leh-Ching
Chai, Chee-Shee
Tan, Seng-Beng
author_facet Yee, Hway Anne
Hodori, Nur `Aqilah Mohd
Tung, Yu-Zhen
Ooi, Po-Lin
Latif, Saiful Adni B. Abdul
Isa, Husna Md
Ng, Diana-Leh-Ching
Chai, Chee-Shee
Tan, Seng-Beng
author_sort Yee, Hway Anne
title Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
title_short Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
title_full Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the Malaysian community during the COVID-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
title_sort depression level and coping responses toward the movement control order and its impact on quality of life in the malaysian community during the covid-19 pandemic: a web-based cross-sectional study
publisher BMC
publishDate 2021
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/34297/
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score 13.160551