Gulf Today

COVID-19 threatens to aggravate depression

- Chris Reed,

The coronaviru­s outbreak gathering speed around the world is scary enough. Locally, the announceme­nt Wednesday morning that California had its first COVID-19 death hammered this home. But even after ( and assuming) the virus ultimately fades away, whether its overall impact is akin to the average annual global deaths from seasonal flu — ranging from 291,000 to 646,000 people — much less than that, or much worse, the outbreak seems certain to worsen an existing American epidemic: the high levels of mental illness linked to technology and/or extreme isolation.

It also seems likely to deepen divisions nationwide. Let’s look at technology first.

Smartphone­s and social media are blamed in nations rich and poor for creating vast alienation and loneliness among the young. Instead of bringing people closer, the ability to quickly connect with others’ lives via Facebook, Instagram or Twitter makes us feel alone in the virtual crowd because everyone else can seem more popular, more clever, more attractive, better off financiall­y or to have happier families.

In her 2017 essay in The Atlantic — “Have Smartphone­s Destroyed a Generation?” — San Diego State University psychology professor

Jean M. Twenge laid out the case that devices and social media had laid waste to the mental health of millions of children from grade school to high school. That same year, University of Pittsburgh physician/researcher Brian E. Primrack and his colleagues establishe­d a nexus between social media use and feelings of social isolation among Americans up to 32 years old. There’s been less academic research into whether social media and smartphone­s have taken a similar toll on middle-aged and older Americans, but studies show one-third of those in that age range also face an epidemic of loneliness with few friendly voices in their lives. Many live alone and have little connection with other adults, their children or co-workers.

So at a time when millions of Americans can go days without having a meaningful personal interactio­n with another human being, along comes a health threat that authoritie­s say is most easily avoided by not having any such contact. Lengthy isolation is obviously not what US authoritie­s have advised. But from Japan and South Korea closing schools for a month to Switzerlan­d forsaking gatherings of 1,000 or more people to airlines canceling flights to China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Iran and parts of Italy, the message seems clear:

Large groups of people are risky to be with — so avoid them.

When these admonition­s go away, will people return to their old habits? Many probably will. But there is plenty of academic research into epidemics and pandemics and their fallout that suggests some won’t. Large-scale disease outbreaks can promote depression, stigmatisa­tion and xenophobia, and can weaken people’s belief in the efficacy of authoritie­s. In other words, they make matters much worse for those who already suffer from or are inclined to alienation and loneliness.

That’s not all. Pandemics also have the potential to turn large segments of the population against each other. When authoritie­s respond to a virulent pandemic, “A unified perception of shared disaster will reduce psychiatri­c casualties,” Dr. David J. Rissmiller wrote in Psychiatri­c Times magazine in 2007. Or not, he added. “Alternativ­ely, a perceived bias in pandemic resource allocation, such as hospital respirator­s and beds ... will fuel a fractious response that will amplify psychiatri­c suffering.”

In other words, this is a divisive crisis waiting to happen. In the United States, there are only 62,000 full-featured mechanical ventilator­s — and a 2005 federal study showed the nation would need 12 times that many in a mass respirator­y-related outbreak. In China, an immense shortage of hospital beds has hindered its response to the COVID-19 epidemic. If it emerges that Chinese President Xi Jinping gave Communist Party big shots and their families much better COVID-19 care, a convulsive reaction is likely. China may have a second cultural revolution that doesn’t turn out as well for Xi as the first one did for Mao Zedong.

In Iran, the powers that be already tragically have some cover. An aide in the inner circle of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei died of coronaviru­s on Monday, and the deputy health minister and at least 23 lawmakers have tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

If the US has its own epidemic, those who decide who gets ventilator­s and who gets beds could face enormous blowback from those who don’t and their families. If there is a perception that certain states or regions — or rich people — are favoured, watch out. If you thought Americans were already divided and prone to isolation and disillusio­nment before COVID-19, you haven’t seen anything yet.

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