COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor

Biological stress is the “nonspecific response of the body to any demand made upon it”. By definition, stress should be caused by different factors (stressors) eliciting similar neuroendocrine changes as well as bodily and behavioural alterations. COVID-19 (coronavirus disease—2019) caused by the S...

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Main Authors: Sandor Szabo, Pantelina Zourna-Hargaden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia 2020-12-01
Series:Интегративная физиология
Subjects:
Online Access:https://intphysiology.ru/index.php/main/article/view/65
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spelling doaj-f2193b4479914d06839e8cefb46cc4812021-10-07T08:42:32ZengHerzen State Pedagogical University of RussiaИнтегративная физиология2687-12702020-12-011410.33910/2687-1270-2020-1-4-258-265COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressorSandor Szabo0Pantelina Zourna-Hargaden1School of Medicine, American University of Health Sciences; School of Medicine, University of CaliforniaSchool of Medicine, American University of Health Sciences Biological stress is the “nonspecific response of the body to any demand made upon it”. By definition, stress should be caused by different factors (stressors) eliciting similar neuroendocrine changes as well as bodily and behavioural alterations. COVID-19 (coronavirus disease—2019) caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus is a new and complex infectious disease. Its sudden and unexpected appearance in late 2019 and early 2020 found most countries unprepared; hence, it is not surprising that the new disease created much confusion, panic and chaos that almost predictably lead to stress. The multifactorial stress etiology is almost a given in a pandemic like this, e.g., anxiety about getting infected, uncertainty about what the future may bring, depression, isolation, family arguments in close quarters, real or perceived food shortages, unemployment, reduced income or its total loss, all culminating in increased domestic violence, suicides and stress-related diseases, such as heart attacks (i.e., myocardial infarction). The first scientific publications documenting these changes, especially in older populations, came from China in early and mid-2020. These results, originating from online surveys and interview-based assessments in various countries showed 20–40% increase in perceived distress, especially anxiety, with a substantial increase in PTSD. Fortunately, both the lay press and scientific publications advocate stress-prevention techniques that range from the “relaxation response” to yoga and specific physical exercises. The long-term health effects and public health consequences of increased distress due to COVID-19 remain to be seen and must be investigated. https://intphysiology.ru/index.php/main/article/view/65stressdistressCOVID-19public healthepidemiologystress-related diseases
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sandor Szabo
Pantelina Zourna-Hargaden
spellingShingle Sandor Szabo
Pantelina Zourna-Hargaden
COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor
Интегративная физиология
stress
distress
COVID-19
public health
epidemiology
stress-related diseases
author_facet Sandor Szabo
Pantelina Zourna-Hargaden
author_sort Sandor Szabo
title COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor
title_short COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor
title_full COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor
title_fullStr COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor
title_full_unstemmed COVID-19: New disease and the largest new human stressor
title_sort covid-19: new disease and the largest new human stressor
publisher Herzen State Pedagogical University of Russia
series Интегративная физиология
issn 2687-1270
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Biological stress is the “nonspecific response of the body to any demand made upon it”. By definition, stress should be caused by different factors (stressors) eliciting similar neuroendocrine changes as well as bodily and behavioural alterations. COVID-19 (coronavirus disease—2019) caused by the SARS-CoV-2 virus is a new and complex infectious disease. Its sudden and unexpected appearance in late 2019 and early 2020 found most countries unprepared; hence, it is not surprising that the new disease created much confusion, panic and chaos that almost predictably lead to stress. The multifactorial stress etiology is almost a given in a pandemic like this, e.g., anxiety about getting infected, uncertainty about what the future may bring, depression, isolation, family arguments in close quarters, real or perceived food shortages, unemployment, reduced income or its total loss, all culminating in increased domestic violence, suicides and stress-related diseases, such as heart attacks (i.e., myocardial infarction). The first scientific publications documenting these changes, especially in older populations, came from China in early and mid-2020. These results, originating from online surveys and interview-based assessments in various countries showed 20–40% increase in perceived distress, especially anxiety, with a substantial increase in PTSD. Fortunately, both the lay press and scientific publications advocate stress-prevention techniques that range from the “relaxation response” to yoga and specific physical exercises. The long-term health effects and public health consequences of increased distress due to COVID-19 remain to be seen and must be investigated.
topic stress
distress
COVID-19
public health
epidemiology
stress-related diseases
url https://intphysiology.ru/index.php/main/article/view/65
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