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The UK had the highest levels of psychological distress in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic compared with other economically developed nations, according to new research by Kingston University in partnership with London South Bank University (LSBU) and Imperial College Business School.
Research news - Page 3 - - Research - Kingston University London
Coronavirus and the impact on students in higher education in England: September to December 2020 - Office for National Statistics
During the pandemic, 41% of US adults faced high levels of mental distress at least once
Levels of depression, anxiety, and psychological distress among Ugandan adults during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic: cross-sectional evidence from a mobile phone-based population survey, Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health
Levels of depression, anxiety, and psychological distress among Ugandan adults during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic: cross-sectional evidence from a mobile phone-based population survey, Cambridge Prisms: Global Mental Health
Mental health and the pandemic: What U.S. surveys have found
During the pandemic, 41% of US adults faced high levels of mental distress at least once
PDF) Psychological distress and work and social adjustment in the COVID-19 pandemic: a cross-Country analysis
PDF) The English National Cohort Study of Flooding and Health: The change in the prevalence of psychological morbidity at year two
The era of Covid ambivalence: what do we do as normalcy returns but Delta surges?, Coronavirus
Amid COVID-19, 33% experienced high levels of psychological distress in U.S.