
Pandemia can change people’s view to life
Disobey / Alamy
Covid-19 Pandemia gave older people in England for a stronger sense of goal and greater life satisfaction because he probably deepened the appreciation for the simple things in life.
Already knew the well-being of certain people and Life satisfaction immersed in the early years of the pandemicBut then what happened, after lifting most of the restrictions, it is less understood. “Unfortunately, most studies were completed did not follow Pandemia (these years), so there was a large gap in the study,” he says Paola Zaninotto University College in London.
To correct this, Zaninotto and his colleagues studied data with almost 4000 well-being and depression symptoms, especially whites, people in England, were 50 years or more at the time of the study.
Each participant completed a survey in two years, in the second, the first year of Pandemic in 2020 and ended at the end of 2021 and early 2023. More than 85% of the participants completed this last survey in 2022 after most of the infection control measures are completed in England.
The team, which he found before Pandemia rated their sense of life with an average score of 7.5 points, which is 7.2 to 7.6, pre-pandemic upgrade to the previous level.
Also, participants had a 7.3 life satisfaction score before Pandemia, and despite immersing in pandemic 6.9 at the beginning, it rose to 7.5 in the last survey.
Although they are small turns in the welfare level at the population, some people have had greater changes that affect their work and relationships. Rebecca Pearson Bristol University, United Kingdom.
The global occurrence may remind people who are important in life, says Zaninotto. “Pandemia brought a number of challenges, but also a wider appreciation for our lives – perhaps social connections and other significant activities,” he noted.
The team also found the average depression rates – at least four depressions that define symptoms, such as feeling lonely – before doubling the first period. The rates fell in the last survey, but the pandemic remained above the previous level.
“I could feel people,” I could see my family again, “and all things, which and at the same time find yourself, may not feel pleasure in the same path,” says Pearson. More studies should explore what these higher depression rates are driving exactly what.
Additional research should also explore how the results return anywhere else, says Kelsey O’Connor In the National Institute of Luxembourg Statistics and Economics Studies. “Pandemia policy and pandemic anguish were so different in other countries,” he said. “You can’t really younger, ethnic minorities or excluded groups.”
Themes: