2020
DOI: 10.1101/2020.11.19.20229856
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Typhoon Eye Effect vs. Ripple Effect: The Role of Family Size on the Mental Health under the COVID-19 Pandemic in Pakistan

Abstract: BackgroundThe recent outbreak of COVID-19 impacts the mental health of people worldwide. The mental conditions and the associated predictors of adults in Pakistan, the fifth most populous country in the world, during the COVID-19 remains understudied. We aim to investigate distress, anxiety and overall mental health and their associated predictors among Pakistani adults in this pandemic. We specifically examine the mental health issues based on the distance to the epicenter, a predictor that has revealed oppos… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…There are possible explanations from many perspectives, including the meaning and fulfillment associated with work, more potential social interactions from going out to work, and less time and dependence on information from online and social media. In terms of future research, this study finds that the predictors of distress and their effect during the Covid-19 pandemic In Brazil differ from that in other countries, such as Peru, China, Iran, and Pakistan [ 6 , 19 , 25 , 26 ], suggesting we need to identify useful predictors of mental health in individual countries during the Covid-19 pandemic, because countries “vary in their medical systems, the availability of personal protective equipment (PPE), cultures, labor and employment conditions, the policies of lockdown, the ease of working from home and maintaining a living in a pandemic, and the information in both mainstream and social media, to name just a few” [ 6 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…There are possible explanations from many perspectives, including the meaning and fulfillment associated with work, more potential social interactions from going out to work, and less time and dependence on information from online and social media. In terms of future research, this study finds that the predictors of distress and their effect during the Covid-19 pandemic In Brazil differ from that in other countries, such as Peru, China, Iran, and Pakistan [ 6 , 19 , 25 , 26 ], suggesting we need to identify useful predictors of mental health in individual countries during the Covid-19 pandemic, because countries “vary in their medical systems, the availability of personal protective equipment (PPE), cultures, labor and employment conditions, the policies of lockdown, the ease of working from home and maintaining a living in a pandemic, and the information in both mainstream and social media, to name just a few” [ 6 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%