Lockdown ‘hit harder on mental health of women and the young’
PRE-EXISTING INEQUALITIES in the mental health of women and young people have widened during the coronavirus lockdown, new research suggests.
Women, young people and parents of children under five have been hardest hit psychologically, with all three groups reporting increased levels of difficulty sleeping or concentrating, problems with decision-making or feeling overwhelmed.
A new study found 27 per cent of people in the UK were experiencing clinically significant levels of psychological distress in April, compared with 19 per cent before the pandemic.
Increases were bigger in some groups compared to others, with a 33 per cent rise among women, 32 per cent among parents with young children and 37 per cent among young people aged 18 to 24, the study found.
People who were employed before
the pandemic also averaged a notable increase in their score.
The 17,452 people in the study were taking part in the UK Household Longitudinal Study (UKHLS) and were aged 16 and over.
The research, published in The Lancet Psychiatry, included a team from the University of Manchester, King’s College London, City University and the National Centre for Social Research.
The researchers concluded: “By late April, 2020, mental health in the UK had deteriorated compared with pre-Covid-19 trends. Policies emphasising the needs of women, young people, and those with pre-school aged children are likely to play an important part in preventing future mental illness.”
Sally McManus, joint senior author of the study from City University, said: “The pandemic has brought people’s differing life circumstances into stark contrast.
“We found that, overall, preexisting inequalities in mental health for women and young people have widened.
“At the same time new inequalities have emerged, such as for those living with pre-school children. These findings should help inform social and educational policies aimed at mitigating the impact of the pandemic on the nation’s mental health, so that we can try to avoid a rise in mental illness in the years to come.”