National trends in counseling for stress and depression and COVID-19 pandemic-related factors among adults, 2009-2022: A nationwide study in South Korea: Stress, depression, and pandemic.

Publication date: Jul 01, 2024

To investigate the long-term trends in counseling for stress and depression using data from a nationwide survey in South Korea. We conducted a nationwide serial, large-scale, cross-sectional, survey-based study using data from 2,903,887 Korean adults from the Korea Community Health Survey, 2009-2022. Our study investigated the trends and risk factors for counseling for stress and depression during the pre-pandemic (2009-2019) and pandemic era (2020-2022). The prevalence of counseling for stress and depression increased across pre-pandemic (counseling for stress: β, 0. 217 [95 % CI, 0. 194 to 0. 241]; counseling for depression: β, 0. 136 [0. 118 to 0. 154]) and pandemic periods (β, 0. 324 [0. 287 to 0. 360]; β, 0. 210 [0. 182 to 0. 239], respectively). The prevalence of counseling for stress and depression showed steeper slopes for increasing trends after the outbreak. In addition, subgroups with female sex, urban residence, lower household income, lower self-rated health, shorter sleep time, and higher worries about contracting COVID-19 were the risk factors associated with the increased prevalence of counseling for stress and depression. Our study analyzed the trends in counseling for stress and depression among over two million South Korean adults in 2009-2022, revealing a significant escalation during the pandemic. These findings emphasize the need for mental health policies to support vulnerable groups during the pandemic.

Concepts Keywords
Counseling Adult
Korean Aged
Pandemic Counseling
COVID-19
Cross-Sectional Studies
Depression
Depression
Epidemiology
Female
Health Surveys
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Prevalence
Prevalence
Republic of Korea
Risk Factors
South Korea
Stress
Stress, Psychological
Trend
Young Adult

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease VO time
disease MESH Stress Psychological

Original Article

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