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Callers to global help lines voiced similar pandemic worries

A man holds a cellphone.
As the coronavirus spread across borders early in the pandemic, calls to global help lines showed a striking similarity in the toll on mental health.
(Jenny Kane / Associated Press)
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Fears of infection. Loneliness. Worries about physical health.

As the coronavirus spread across borders early in the pandemic, calls to global help lines showed a striking similarity in the toll on mental health — from China to Lebanon, Finland to Slovenia.

An analysis of 8 million calls to help lines in 19 countries, published Wednesday in Nature, reveals a collective response to unprecedented, uncertain times.

Callers’ worries centered on fears of infection, loneliness and physical health. Calls about relationship issues, economic problems and suicide-related issues were generally less prevalent than before the pandemic.

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The Swiss and German researchers looked at help lines in 14 European countries, the United States, China, Hong Kong, Israel and Lebanon. They included suicide-prevention hotlines and ones providing crisis counseling.

“We were struck by how similar the broad evolution of helpline call patterns looked across nations,” said Marius Bruelhart, a University of Lausanne economics professor and the study’s lead author.

Pooling country-specific data during the pandemic’s first 12 weeks in 2020, the researchers found that call volumes peaked at six weeks, rising 35% above calls during the same period in 2019.

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The prevalence of depression symptoms in the U.S. has more than tripled in the COVID-19 era compared to the period before the pandemic.

The researchers also analyzed data through spring 2021 from two of the largest help lines, in France and Germany. Call patterns in those two countries followed upswings and downswings in infections and government restrictions, and the concerns raised were similar to those early in the pandemic.

Strict lockdown and social distancing measures were linked with more calls due to fear, loneliness and suicidal thinking or behavior. Governmental financial support for workers who lost jobs and businesses that lost patrons had the opposite effect, “alleviating distress and mental health concerns,” the researchers said.

Karestan Koenen, a Harvard mental health researcher, said patterns linking a decline in calls with government assistance is an important takeaway for policymakers.

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Analyzing help line data is “an incredibly creative way to assess mental health in the pandemic” in an array of countries, she said.

In the U.S., crisis help lines have been heavily promoted throughout the pandemic and that may have broadened their use, Koenen added.

To thrive in a lonely century, we’ll need more goods and services designed to deliver connection such as AI “friends” and daytime discos for retirees.

Concerns raised in the calls echo results from surveys showing the pandemic’s toll on mental health, said Judith Bass, of Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.

“The idea that fear was part of the early manifestations both makes research sense but also logical sense,” Bass said. The virus “was an unknown that nobody had experienced before.”

Bass noted that the study didn’t include developing countries, such as those in Africa that have experienced Ebola and other disease outbreaks. People in those countries might have reacted differently to the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic than residents of the countries included in the analysis, she said.

Still, the study showed how prevalent help lines are around the world, Bass said, and they are available in many more countries than were included in the study.

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Bruelhart said those used in the study manage data in a way that made them accessible for academic research.

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