Elsevier

Brain, Behavior, and Immunity

Volume 89, October 2020, Pages 569-578
Brain, Behavior, and Immunity

Psychosocial factors and hospitalisations for COVID-19: Prospective cohort study based on a community sample

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbi.2020.06.021Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • We used UK Biobank, a large-scale community-based cohort study.

  • Nine psychosocial factors were associated with an elevated risk of hospitalisation for COVID-19.

  • The only robust relationship was that for cognitive function, a marker of health literacy.

Abstract

Background

While certain infectious diseases have been linked to socioeconomic disadvantage, mental health problems, and lower cognitive function, relationships with COVID-19 are either uncertain or untested. Our objective was to examine the association of a range of psychosocial factors with hospitalisation for COVID-19.

Methods

UK Biobank, a prospective cohort study, comprises around half a million people who were aged 40–69 years at study induction between 2006 and 2010 when information on psychosocial factors and covariates were captured. Hospitalisations for COVID-19 were ascertained between 16th March and 26th April 2020.

Results

There were 908 hospitalisations for COVID-19 in an analytical sample of 431,051 England-based study members. In age- and sex-adjusted analyses, an elevated risk of COVID-19 was related to disadvantaged levels of education (odds ratio; 95% confidence interval: 2.05; 1.70, 2.47), income (2.00; 1.63, 2,47), area deprivation (2.20; 1.86, 2.59), occupation (1.39; 1.14, 1.69), psychological distress (1.58; 1.32, 1.89), mental health (1.50; 1.25, 1.79), neuroticism (1.19; 1.00, 1.42), and performance on two tests of cognitive function – verbal and numerical reasoning (2.66; 2.06, 3.34) and reaction speed (1.27; 1.08, 1.51). These associations were graded (p-value for trend ≤ 0.038) such that effects were apparent across the full psychosocial continua. After mutual adjustment for these characteristics plus ethnicity, comorbidity, and lifestyle factors, only the relationship between lower cognitive function as measured using the reasoning test and risk of the infection remained (1.98; 1.38, 2.85).

Conclusions

A range of psychosocial factors revealed associations with hospitalisation for COVID-19 of which the relation with cognitive function, a marker of health literacy, was most robust.

Keywords

Risk factors
COVID-19
Hospitalisation
Cohort study
UK Biobank

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