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- Title
The relation of unrest-related distress with probable depression during and after widespread civil unrest.
- Authors
Tao, Tiffany Junchen; Li, Tsz Wai; Yim, Sammi Sum Wai; Hou, Wai Kai
- Abstract
Background: This study investigated whether subjective unrest-related distress was associated with probable depression during and after the 2019 anti-ELAB movement in Hong Kong. Methods: Population-representative data were collected from 7157 Hong Kong Chinese in four cross-sectional surveys (July 2019–July 2020). Logistic regression examined the association between subjective unrest-related distress and probable depression (PHQ-9 ⩾ 10), stratified by the number of conflicts/protests across the four timepoints. Results: Unrest-related distress was positively associated with probable depression across different numbers of conflicts/protests. Conclusion: Unrest-related distress is a core indicator of probable depression. Public health interventions should target at resolving the distress during seemingly peaceful period after unrest.
- Subjects
HONG Kong (China); SOCIAL unrest; LOGISTIC regression analysis
- Publication
Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health, 2022, Vol 9, p322
- ISSN
2641-1148
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1017/gmh.2022.27