Open Access

Young People and Covid-19 Pandemic in Our Country


Cite

The current COVID-19 pandemic has raised significant mental health consequences across the world. Even though healthcare workers provide psychological services, the mental health of the overall population often is cause for concern. Psychosocial stressors of the population play a critical role in impacting both the spread of the disease and the occurrence of emotional distress and psychological disorder, during and after an infectious disease outbreak.

The inability to plan, to anticipate future events, and to exert control, at least partially, over external variables inevitably generate stress and tension. Subsequently, this condition can generate more or less discomfort depending on the subjective evaluation of the individual, an evaluation which is influenced by the individual’s stable personality traits. In fact, subjective experiences are never unique: stimuli endowed with the same stressful power do not necessarily cause these reactions in different individuals, while stressful conditions of varying degrees can induce the same response in different people.

The aim of this research was to evaluate some aspects of mental health using answers related to this pandemic of a group young people, selected by chance.

Results showed important changes in quality of life, insecurity, changes in mood and behaviour as well as not optimistic view for the future life.

Discussion confirmed similar finding about young people opinions from other counties.

Additionally, some mediating measures are proposed.

eISSN:
1857-8985
Language:
English
Publication timeframe:
2 times per year
Journal Subjects:
Medicine, Basic Medical Science, History and Ethics of Medicine, Clinical Medicine, other, Social Sciences, Education