Bidirectional associations between COVID-19 and psychiatric disorder: a study of 62,354 COVID-19 cases
Abstract
Background
Adverse mental health consequences of COVID-19, including anxiety and depression, have been widely predicted but not yet accurately measured. There are a range of physical health risk factors for COVID-19, but it is not known if there are also psychiatric risk factors.
Methods
We addressed both questions using cohort studies derived from an electronic health records (EHR) network of 69 million patients including over 62,000 cases of COVID-19. Propensity score matching was used to control for confounding by risk factors for COVID-19 and for more severe illness.
Findings
In patients with no prior psychiatric history, COVID-19 was associated with an increased incidence of psychiatric diagnoses in the three months after infection compared to 6 other health events (hazard ratio [95% CI] 2.1 [1.8–2.5] compared to influenza; 1.7 [1.5–1.9] compared to other respiratory tract infections; 1.6 [1.4–1.9] compared to skin infection; 1.6 [1.3–1.9] compared to cholelithiasis; 2.2 [1.9–2.6] compared to urolithiasis, and 2.1 [1.9–2.5] compared to fracture of a large bone; all p< 0.0001). The increase was greatest for anxiety disorders but also present for depression, insomnia, and dementia. The results were robust to several sensitivity analyses. There was a ∼30% reduction in psychiatric diagnoses in the total EHR population over the same period. A psychiatric diagnosis in the previous year was associated with a 65% higher incidence of COVID-19 (relative risk 1.65, 95% CI: 1.59–1.71, p< 0.0001). This was independent of known physical health risk factors for COVID-19.
Interpretation
COVID-19 infection has both psychiatric sequelae and psychiatric antecedents. Survivors have an increased rate of new onset psychiatric disorders, and prior psychiatric disorders are associated with a higher risk of COVID-19. The findings have implications for research into aetiology and highlight the need for clinical services to provide multidisciplinary follow-up, and prompt detection and treatment.
Related articles
Related articles are currently not available for this article.