Oliver Freudenreich, MD, FACLP Co-Director, MGH Schizophrenia Clinical and Research Program Associate Professor of Psychiatry Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts
Nicholas Kontos, MD, FACLP Director, Fellowship in Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry Assistant Professor of Psychiatry Massachusetts General Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston, Massachusetts
John Querques, MD Vice Chairman for Hospital Services Department of Psychiatry Tufts Medical Center Associate Professor of Psychiatry Tufts University School of Medicine Boston, Massachusetts
Disclosures Dr. Freudenreich has received grant or research support from Alkermes, Avanir, Janssen, and Otsuka, and has served as a consultant to American Psychiatric Association, Alkermes, Janssen, Neurocrine, Novartis, and Roche. Dr. Kontos and Dr. Querques report no financial relationships with any companies whose products are mentioned in this article, or with manufacturers of competing products.
Psychological aspects of pandemics.Previous infectious outbreaks have reaffirmed that mental health plays an outsized role during epidemics. Chaos, uncertainty, fear of death, and loss of income and housing cause prolonged stress and exact a psychological toll.
Adverse psychological impacts include expectable, normal reactions such as stress-induced anxiety or insomnia. In addition, new-onset psychiatric illnesses or exacerbations of existing ones may emerge.8 As disillusionment and demoralization appear in the wake of the acute phase, with persistently high unemployment, suicide prevention becomes an important goal.9
Pandemics lead to expectable behavioral responses (eg, increases in substance use and interpersonal conflict). Fear-based decisions may result in unhelpful behavior, such as hoarding medications (which may result in shortages) or dangerous, unsupervised use of unproven medications (eg, hydroxychloroquine). Trust is needed to accept public-health measures, and recommendations (eg, wearing masks) must be culturally informed to be credible and effective.
Because people are affected differently, at individual, cultural, and socioeconomic levels, they will view the situation differently. For many people, secondary stressors (eg, job loss) may be more disastrous than the primary medical event (ie, the pandemic). This distinction is critical because concrete financial help, not psychiatric care, is needed. Sometimes, even when a psychiatric disorder such as SMI or major neurocognitive disorder is present, the illusion of an acute decompensation can be created by the loss of social and structural supports that previously scaffolded a person’s life.
Mental illness prevention.Community mental-health surveillance is important to monitor for distress, psychiatric symptoms, health-risk behaviors, risk and safety perception, and preparedness. Clinicians must be ready to normalize expectable and temporary distress, while recognizing when that distress becomes pathological. This may be difficult in patients with SMI who often already have reduced stress tolerance or problem-based coping skills.10