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How COVID-19 affected mental well-being: An 11-week trajectories of daily well-being of Koreans amidst COVID-19 by age, gender and region

Authors
Choi, IncheolKim, Joo HyunKim, NamheeChoi, EunsooChoi, JonganSuk, Hye WonNa, Jinkyung
Issue Date
2021
Publisher
PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
Citation
PLOS ONE, v.16, no.4
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
PLOS ONE
Volume
16
Number
4
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/129978
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0250252
ISSN
1932-6203
Abstract
The present study examined the daily well-being of Koreans (n = 353,340) for 11 weeks during the COVID-19 pandemic (January 20 -April 7). We analyzed whether and how life satisfaction, positive affect, negative affect, and life meaning changed during the outbreak. First, we found that the well-being of Koreans changed daily in a cubic fashion, such that it declined and recovered during the early phase but declined substantially during the later phase (after COVID- 19 was declared world pandemic by WHO). Second, unlike other emotions, boredom displayed a distinctive pattern of linear increase, especially for younger people, suggesting that boredom might be, in part, responsible for their inability to comply with social distancing recommendations. Third, the well-being of older people and males changed less compared to younger people and females. Finally, daily well-being dropped significantly more in the hard-hit regions than in other regions. Implications and limitations are discussed.
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