Covid's Effect on Mental Health Not as Great as First Thought, Study Suggests (theguardian.com) 110
Covid-19 may not have taken as great a toll on the mental health of most people as earlier research has indicated, a new study suggests. From a report: The pandemic resulted in "minimal" changes in mental health symptoms among the general population, according to a review of 137 studies from around the world led by researchers at McGill University in Canada, and published in the British Medical Journal. Brett Thombs, a psychiatry professor at McGill University and senior author, said some of the public narrative around the mental health impacts of Covid-19 were based on "poor-quality studies and anecdotes," which became "self-fulfilling prophecies," adding that there was a need for more "rigorous science."
However, some experts disputed this, warning such readings could obscure the impact on individual groups such as children, women and people with low incomes or pre-existing mental health problems. They also said other robust studies had reached different conclusions. Thombs said: "Mental health in Covid-19 is much more nuanced than people have made it out to be. Claims that the mental health of most people has deteriorated significantly during the pandemic have been based primarily on individual studies that are 'snapshots' of a particular situation, in a particular place, at a particular time. They typically don't involve any long-term comparison with what had existed before or came after."
However, some experts disputed this, warning such readings could obscure the impact on individual groups such as children, women and people with low incomes or pre-existing mental health problems. They also said other robust studies had reached different conclusions. Thombs said: "Mental health in Covid-19 is much more nuanced than people have made it out to be. Claims that the mental health of most people has deteriorated significantly during the pandemic have been based primarily on individual studies that are 'snapshots' of a particular situation, in a particular place, at a particular time. They typically don't involve any long-term comparison with what had existed before or came after."
My mental health improved (Score:5, Interesting)
Now that I've been WFH full time for over three years, not only my mental health but also my physical health has improved. Just got back from my daily five mile walk. Once it's warm enough I'll be cycling at least 18 miles daily.
Rarely had time or energy for this when I was in the office four days a week. Thank you Covid!
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Leaving only an hour a day to do work. That greatly helps with mental health as well.
Re:My mental health improved (Score:4, Informative)
How long do you think it takes to walk 5 miles? I think you're in worse shape than you think. A leisurely 3.5 miles per hour would only take you 1.5 hours to hit 5 miles. And most of that could just be reclaimed commuting time.
Bicycling is much faster than walking. Easy to hit 12mph at a leisurely pace pace. Still the same 1.5 hours.
Re: My mental health improved (Score:3, Informative)
3.5 mph isnt leisurely, it's quite a fast walk.
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I'd say 5 mph is quite fast, but not a huge challenge. 3.5 is just a little bit above average pace, but I get bored with slow walking so I might be a bit skewed. If you're doing it for fitness, you're probably not going slower than that anyway.
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I'd say 5 mph is quite fast, but not a huge challenge.
Walking 5 miles per hour is definitely a significant challenge. It's well above normal walking speed and well into the jogging speed range.
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So-called "power" walking is less efficient than jogging and burns more energy. But it's also lower intensity on the joints. Jogging speed and speed walking mostly overlap in the speed range.
5mph is only provided as a contrast to an average/leisurely 3.5mph. it's not what's being suggested. I think you forgot that I was replying to someone that said 3.5mph was fast.
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Though as someone else pointed out, it also depends a lot on your height. If you're around 6 feet tall (like I am), your normal walking pace may be 3.25-3.5 miles per hour, just because you cover more ground per step.
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You do know that the original post in this thread is about someone who is walking 5 miles a day for their physical health, right? I think we can use at least 3.5 mph as a baseline for how much of their work day it takes up. Regardless of whether 3 mph seems more reasonable to you, a 5 mile walk doesn't take significantly longer at the slower pace, which is the whole entire point.
You seem to think that walking as fast as jogging is a "significant challenge" which maybe you consider jogging or running to be
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A leisurely 3.5 miles per hour would only take you 1.5 hours to hit 5 miles.
3 miles per hour is considered typical walking pace. 3.5 miles per hour isn't quite "power walking", but maintaining that pace for 5 miles would be a decent exertion.
Having said that, your general point is still true. Walking 5 miles should still be under 2 hours. Cycling 20 miles should be somewhere around 2 hours (+/- probably 30 minutes), depending on terrain/hills.
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Eh, I hike with significant hills and stop to take pictures and admire views and wildlife and am not doing it for the exercise but for enjoying the outdoors, and my phone still shows me averaging 3 MPH on 10 mile hikes. Walking on flat ground at 3 MPH for 5 miles shouldn't even make you sweat if it's not hot out.
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Walking on flat ground at 3 MPH for 5 miles shouldn't even make you sweat if it's not hot out.
Because like I said, 3 miles per hour is standard walking pace. 3.5 miles per hour might not sound like it's much faster, but it is.
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He must do all of his walking with his pet tortoise if he thinks 5 miles takes the whole day.
Re: My mental health improved (Score:1)
oh look, country bumpkin can't conceive of a five mile walk with traffic control devices and busy crossings.
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It's like you've never heard of suburbs, parks, walking trails.... Why would you go on a walk somewhere that you can't actually maintain a decent heart rate?
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Just got back from my daily five mile walk. Once it's warm enough I'll be cycling at least 18 miles
Leaving only an hour a day to do work. That greatly helps with mental health as well.
You must be a very slow cyclist. My dad cycled 13 miles a day (6.4 miles each way, ~1/2hr journey) each day for pretty much his entire teaching career. 18 miles ain't much more. 1 1/2hr ride ain't much of a dent in your day. Pretty much a standard gym workout time.
Re:My mental health improved (Score:5, Interesting)
While I think it has been great for mental....my health has taken a hit, as that I spend far too much time sitting in meetings and not being active as I once was.
I have a motorized stand up desk, but I either forget to stand, or I find that if I'm having to really concentrate...I do that better sitting than standing.
One thing on this story I'm not getting...are they talking about the mental effects from LONG covid, say you actually had caught the disease...
Or, is this referring to mental anguish from just being locked down for a year or so?
If the latter, I can believe this study, I mean, while it was a PITA having to deal with it...it wasn't that big of a deal. Not like you'd get PTSD from a year or so of being forced to wear a mask, or not able to go everywhere you wanted all the time, etc.
One way to remember to stand (Score:1)
I have a motorized stand up desk, but I either forget to stand,
What I do to help with that is always enter meetings standing. If you get too tired as it goes along you can always go back to sitting.
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Or, is this referring to mental anguish from just being locked down for a year or so?
From the "fuck your feelings" crowd.
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I mean, while it was a PITA having to deal with it...it wasn't that big of a deal. Not like you'd get PTSD from a year or so of being forced to wear a mask, or not able to go everywhere you wanted all the time, etc.
Oh you poor baby. Target asked you to wear a thin paper mask. I believe the correct term here is snowflake.
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Clearly, many of the masks have been blessed by priests and rabbis and some in our population find that it burns when they put them on...
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Actually after the first few months...no one wore a mask that much anyway, so it wasn't draconian down here.
And as it turns out...MOST of those masks didn't do a damned thing to prevent getting or spreading covid, so it was kind of worthless and stupid for so many that did requirement to require them...or throw a hissy fit if they saw someone without.
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You're free to leave society if you don't want to participate in it. No one is obligated to put themselves at risk just because you want to be a plague rat. Get vaxxed or stay the fuck away from the rest of us.
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Why are you saying all this at this point in time?
I mean, it is now common knowledge that the "vax" neither prevents your from catching covid, nor prevents you from spreading it.
It only helps keep some people from dying from it...which is a good thing.
And masks? We now also know that unless you h
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Prevents, no. But reducing the probability of catching or spreading Covid, yes it does.
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Likely the vaccine promotes the spread. First it does not prepare the mucosal immunity, only serum immunity.
Only serum immunity was needed, else independent studies wouldn't have shown the vaccinated were 90-95% less likely to be infected.
Your claim that vaccines promote spread would be laughed at for hours if there weren't millions of you brainwashed with the same belief.
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You're spreading false information again. That makes you a lying sack of shit.
Masking works [nature.com]
Vaccines work [cdc.gov]
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The jig is up. Rational reasonable people now see the scamdemic psyop for what it truly is.
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How did you get brainwashed with this?
Both Moderna and Biotech's vaccines had a 95% efficacy versus infection. That means they prevented 95% of transmission too.
Efficacy v Omicron isn't so high and falls over time anyway.
We now also know that unless you had an N95 mask and were actually wearing it correctly, that the masking crap did nothing to prevent you from catching or spreading covid.
Also nonsense. There are zero studies using a control and so all they really mean is that masks weren't as effective as we hoped -- probably because people kept taking them off to have a chat. The latter is like wearing a condom all day and then taking it off when you're about to get lai
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You're free to leave society if you don't want to participate in it. No one is obligated to put themselves at risk just because you want to be a plague rat. Get vaxxed or stay the fuck away from the rest of us.
One of many problem with this view is that Pfizer did not know whether Covid vaccine stopped transmission before rollout, executive admits. [news.com.au] and what we now know from analyzing pandemic data that at most vaccines have any effect for up to 12 weeks.
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One of the many problems with your bullshit "view" is that it's bullshit:
Masking Works [nature.com]
Vaccines Work [cdc.gov]
Now, stop licking doorknobs.
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LOL! I take the actual research I cited over your fact-free op-ed you think has any validity.
You plague rats are getting increasingly desperate as none of the bullshit you predicted is coming true. You look like idiots.
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LOL! I take the actual research I cited over your fact-free op-ed you think has any validity.
You plague rats are getting increasingly desperate as none of the bullshit you predicted is coming true. You look like idiots.
The link to the actual study is in the first sentence of the linked article. Since your motivated reasoning prevented you from seeing it, here it is: Physical interventions to interrupt or reduce the spread of respiratory viruses. [cochranelibrary.com]
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LOL! Cherry picking. Stick to nose picking, plague rat.
Masking Works [nature.com]
Vaccines Work [cdc.gov]
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vaccine is an IQ test.
Yep, and you just failed!
Re: My mental health improved (Score:1)
you seem to be confused, the vaccinated can get infected and shed viruses, even cases found with higher viral load than unvaccinated. A vaccination protects you and no one else. Educate your ignorant self before spewing nonsense.
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Get your head out of your ass. Reality does not match you moronic beliefs.
Educate your ignorant self before spewing nonsense.
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You are the one ignorant of reality. The vaccinated can get infected and shed viruses, and some even have higher viral load. The vaccine offers you greater protection but may not for anyone else.
https://www.thelancet.com/jour... [thelancet.com].
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Masking Works [nature.com]
Vaccines Work [cdc.gov]
Get you head out of your ass.
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I said nothing about masking.
I said vaccines will give RECEIPIENT protection.
You're the one with reading comprehension problem and head up ass. Fix yourself before continuing to make fool of yourself.
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If I were as stupid as you, I'd post as AC as well. Learn something about vaccines before you say things that foolish in the future.
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experimental mRNA gene therapy
LOL! You really believe that, don't you? See that mods? He's not a troll, he's just unbelievably stupid!
This. (Score:5, Interesting)
Yeah, there were some issues with people feeling isolated, but as a nerd it was pretty great. I'm obviously long since out of school, but for a lot of kids there was overall less stress doing school from home (even if there are other issues with that). South Park did a whole episode on the topic (albeit from the perspective of Eric Cartman being lazy instead of from a nerd who just wants to be left alone).
It's not just a nerd thing though. We put a lot of excess stress on kids going to school they don't need (for a variety of bad reasons). And not getting dragged into the school building every day relieves a lot of that.
I'm not saying we do away with school buildings, but it's worth asking ourselves why we let schools suck so damn much. Human beings aren't really meant to be in a constant state of stress like we are. And "whatever doesn't kill me" is B.S.
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I get my contact from family and my many dear "real" friends I've had for years.
Work people are work people, not friends...that can get you in trouble.
Do you not have friends outside of work...I mean real ones, not "Facebook like friends"....?
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I understand.
But do try to get out there and meet friends outside of work....you often mention you walk a lot, so I surmise you are not a shut in. Just try to make conversation while out...shopping or whatever.
Not sure where you live, if you were in the south, it is EASY to strike up a conversations with damned near anyone....up northeast, not as f
Re: My mental health improved (Score:2)
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Wow...way to be insulting.
I wasn't suggesting you move anywhere...I didn't kno
Re: My mental health improved (Score:2)
Humans (Score:1)
When a species IQ hovers near absolute zero there’s no possibility of going lower.
Re: Humans (Score:2)
Heh, yah. That means going back to the Youtube comments section.
Well, technically... (Score:2, Troll)
The biggest crackpots croaked, so.... it's kinda hard to say if you look at the average...
What I love about science (Score:3, Insightful)
What I love most about science is that if you're willing to spend enough money, you can completely reverse the present scientific consensus. A well-structured study can be narrowed to the extent that it says whatever the funders want said, without stating anything categorically false. This isn't just p-hacking; if you can control the funding of science to exclude those scientists who disagree with your point of view, the only credentialed scientists remaining will be those who support your views. Sometimes, a "failure to find an effect", while not deliberately lying, is all that is needed.
Re:What I love about science (Score:4, Funny)
*Citation needed.
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"control the funding of science" Really? What dept is that under? One you imagined?
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Their next reply is going to be "follow the money" without any more context.
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Think so?
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Perhaps you'd like a paper on one of the most egregious examples?
:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/p... [nih.gov]
For a more recent example, you can look into how oil companies have been manipulating funding to undermine the scientific consensus on climate change.
And let's not forget that a large amount of funding for science is controlled by congress, who are all being bought off through PACs to oppose any scientific research that might undermine a company's profits and ability to externalize costs (and no, I'm not going
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What morons modded this insightful? This isn't how science works. At all. Get your head out of your ass.
Re: What I love about science (Score:1)
you have never worked in science, it is political and agenda driven in too many cases. Big tobacco, big oil, FDA, ....
Yes, the Science (Score:3)
A process. A means by which to determine the truth.
You do not speak of science. No, you speak of a false god, a straw man that exists in the minds of those who need a boogeyman, or red-herring, a nothing, with which to battle and then declare victory over. Or to be "against" because seeking confirmable, repeatable results is somehow, mysterious to those who demand a mystery. Because with clarity their purposes fall to pieces as not in the interest of but those that push them. Good day sir. You look
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You've got a pretty good "No true Scotsman" fallacy going on there. Maybe you should continue to illustrate just how naive you really are? Or perhaps reply to the point I made about the corruption of science through evolutionary funding?
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But, perhaps, maybe by evolution you perhaps mean that the glorious Yahweh, Mighty Powers established the
That is not how science works (Score:3)
This is not to say you can't get fake studies done by the industries that policy makers use and abuse so that they can do policies that are not actually informed by science. But let's not pretend that everyone involved doesn't know exactly what they're doing. They know they're us
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Really? [scientificamerican.com]
Honestly, peer review is just groupthink on steroids. Granted, it's better than nothing, but it is far from the degree of scrutiny routinely used in other fields. Alan Sokal [wikipedia.org] managed to get complete giberish past peer review into Social Text. And let's not forget this guy [wikipedia.org], who managed to discover non-existent elements 116 and 118.
There's a saying you've got to be smarter than what you're working with. If you don't understand how science can be corrupted to produce the outcome desired, you're
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> margarine is healthier than butter, and that vaccination would prevent the spread of covid
What? Those statements are just vague enough to be true and false at the same time. And more generally, I think you're mixing rigorous scientific research, which is good, with the ability to manipulate media, politicians and public opinion.
Your misunderstanding his post (Score:2)
The best part is my explanation is at least as plausible as the original poster's.
You could have at least read my post (Score:2)
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At least in the U.S.... (Score:1)
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Mental health doesn't track physical health (Score:3)
You'd think so, but no. I did a blog post today, about Matthew Walther, who scandalized many readers of The Atlantic in December 2021, with his article about how, where he lives in rural Michigan, "nobody cares about COVID". He described a happy place, compared to much of America, where nobody wore masks at weddings and other parties, his wife's doctors didn't discuss masks or vaccinations during her pregnancy, just an ordinary year. Much cranky letter-writing and journalism resulted. ( Blog post has links: http://brander.ca/cccc#walther [brander.ca] )
The post goes on to note that Michigan was surrounded by states and a province that had a fraction of Michigan's death rate - if they had the death rate of Ontario, just across a river, 30,000 Michganders would still be walking around...and Ontario is NOT a rural province.
But, perhaps Michiganders were psychologically happier, as their ignorance, created by just not-caring, was bliss.
Re:Work From Home Pansies (Score:4, Funny)
I'll have you know I did very little real work at the office too!
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It only really affected the extroverts... (Score:2)
Nowhere to go but up... (Score:2)
To me, the primary reason that this might be true is that we're all so completely screwed up, anyway. These days, if you're not seeing a therapist, you're the exception.
Covid - not as toxic as social media (Score:2)
https://jonathanhaidt.substack... [substack.com]
Depression and anxiety and suicide has SKYROCKETED among young girls since 2012, vastly more than that suffered by boys.
Curiously, if you allow the respondents to self-identify as liberal or conservative, there's a distinction there too that liberal girls are the worst hit by a large margin, followed by liberal boys, conservative girls, and conservative boys (con girls only just passed con boys around 2016, otherwise they actually track fairly closely).
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Who couldn't feel up lifted by the former alleged president when he waxed metaphorically over hydroxychloroquine or wondered about shining UV light inside the body (knocks those germs right out of there). And for comic relief, there was his Sharpie enhanced map of a hurricane's path. It was non-stop amusement with his over 30,000 falsehoods uttered or tweeted. Sure the country was in danger, but we had Bozo the Clown as the alleged president.
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...said the person who doesn't have long Covid, or one of those with extremely long Covid in the cemetery...over one million Americans. Nope, it all doom mongering.
My doctor told me that with his hospital gig and at the beginning of Covid before the vaccines, the Covid patients sounded much worse than the AIDS patients he had treated during that epidemic. So you got to suffer horribly before it did you in. Nope, just doom mongering.
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I had a relative who suffered for almost 2 months after "beating" COVID due to it causing so much clotting. All because a Trumptard where she lived brought and spread it around; unfortunately, they died 4 days after infection and did not suffer much.
Re: The bedwetters and snowflakes... (Score:1)
Over 60m people die every year on this planet. Get over it. You'll be one if them one day and so will I and you can spare me the covid sob stories. Go visit africa and see what far worse diseases they have to out up with every day for every fucking year forever. If you gave a fuck about humanity instead of your own sorry backside youd be out there helping them.
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"mentally fragile types"
Who throws a fit when a private business asked people to wear masks?
Survey says!
mentally fragile
Re: The bedwetters and snowflakes... (Score:2)
Speak for yourself I just ignored those cretinous mandates.