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Journal Article

Citation

Wong ELY, Qiu H, Sun KS, Mo PKH, Lai AHY, Yam CHK, Miao HY, Cheung AWL, Yeoh EK. Int. J. Public Health 2024; 69: e1606828.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.3389/ijph.2024.1606828

PMID

38681117

PMCID

PMC11045880

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To compare the prevalence of anxiety/depression, resilience, and social support among nurses, foreign domestic helpers (FDHs), and residents living in subdivided units (SDUs), and to examine their associations in these high-risk groups in Hong Kong during Omicron waves.

METHODS: We recruited 1,014 nurses, 621 FDHs, and 651 SDU residents from December 2021 to May 2022 in this cross-sectional survey. The depression, anxiety, social support, and resilience levels were measured by the validated scales. The multivariate binary logistic regression and causal mediation analysis were applied to examine the associations.

RESULTS: We observed a prevalence of 17.7% in anxiety and 21.6% in depression which were the highest in SDU residents, followed by FDHs, and lowest in nurses. Social support was associated with increased resilience levels and decreased risks of anxiety/depression. The association of social support with mental disorders was partly mediated by resilience, accounting for 30.9% and 20.9% of the total effect of social support on anxiety and depression, respectively.

CONCLUSION: Public health strategies should target improving social support and providing resilience-promoting interventions to help reduce mental disorders in vulnerable groups.


Language: en

Keywords

*Anxiety/epidemiology; *Depression/epidemiology/psychology; *Mediation Analysis; *Resilience, Psychological; *Social Support; Adult; anxiety; causal mediation analysis; COVID-19/psychology/epidemiology; Cross-Sectional Studies; depression; Female; Hong Kong/epidemiology; Humans; Male; Mental Health; Middle Aged; Prevalence; resilience; social support; vulnerable/high-risk population

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