Abstract
Aim
To investigate changes in psychological distress in community-dwelling older adults before and during the COID-19 pandemic, and the contribution of frailty transitions and multimorbidity in predicting the psychological distress.
Methods
Prospective repeated-measures cohort study on a sample of participants aged 60 and over. A total of 2, 785 respondents at the baseline (May 2019) were followed during the COVID-19 (August 2020). The changes in psychological distress before and during the COVID-19 were assessed using generalized estimation equations with adjusting for sex, age, education, economic status, marital status, tea drinking status, smoking status, alcohol drinking status, sedentary time, sleep quality and ADL.
Results
The psychological distress of older people has significantly increased in August 2020 compared with May 2019. Both older adults who remained frail and transitioned into frail state reported more psychological distress during the COVID-19. Similarly, both pre-existing multimorbidity and emerging multimorbidity groups were associated with more psychological distress. The group of frailty progression who reported new emerging multimorbidity showed more increase in psychological distress, in comparison with those remained non-frail state who reported no multimorbidity.
Conclusion
Psychological distress has increased among the community-dwelling older adults during the COVID-19 pandemic, and sustained and progressive frail state, as well as multimorbidity were all associated with a greater increase of psychological distress. These findings suggest that future public health measures should take into account the increased psychological distress among older people during the COVID-19 pandemic, and the assessment of frailty and multimorbidity might help in warning of psychological distress.
Keywords: COVID-19, older people, psychological distress, frailty transition, multimorbidity