Dreisoerner, A.; Feneberg, AC.; Forbes, PAG.; Pronizius, E.; Piperno, G.; Stijovic, A.; Skoluda, N.; Lamm, C.; Silani, G.; Nater, UM.
Research article (journal) | Peer reviewedObjective: Fatigue is a debilitating symptom common to many disorders and diseases (including COVID-19) with chronic fatigue affecting an estimated 10.1% of adults. However, fatigue in the general population remains understudied, especially during periods of crisis or sustained societal stress. We aimed to identify psychological and biological factors of fatigue during the COVID-19 lockdowns in the general population and to examine whether early fatigue predicted later fatigue, stress, anxiety, and mood. Methods: In this ecological momentary assessment study, 292 participants reported fatigue, stress, anxiety, and mood 5 times a day for two 7-day measurement periods (20,343 observations) during the 2 national lockdowns in Austria and Germany. Hair cortisol was obtained from 85 participants as a marker of long-term hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal activity. Results: Fatigue was associated with younger age (b = −0.27, p b = 0.50, p b = 0.29, p p p = .014). Finally, higher fatigue during the first lockdown was related to higher fatigue, higher stress, higher anxiety, and worse mood during the second lockdown (all p< .001). Conclusions: Factors associated with high fatigue during the lockdowns of the COVID-19 pandemic were young age, low socioeconomic status, higher perceived stress over the past month, and higher loneliness. Results further suggest hypocortisolism in fatigued individuals during COVID-19. Early fatigue may signal psychological vulnerability during large-scale stressors.
| Feneberg, Anja Christine | Professorship of clinical psychology and psychotherapy of children and adolescents (Prof. Hechler) |