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Individuals with chronic conditions are at increased risk of developing depressive symptomatology. While the COVID-19 pandemic increased the risk of mental health problems in the general population, there remains a gap in understanding the association between chronic conditions and depressive symptoms throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Using data from MAP-19: A representative study of the Norwegian population during the COVID-19 pandemic, longitudinal design with nine measurements was implemented to follow 2564 individuals over the 2-year period using Generalised Estimating Equations (M age = 39 years, SD = 13.8; 77% females, 23% males). Individuals with chronic conditions exhibited a differing trajectory of depressive symptomatology compared to those without throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, when controlling for shared socioeconomic status and psychosocial risk factors. We found a significant main effect of time β = -0.16, 95% confidence interval (CI) [-0.235-0.0832] indicating a decrease in depressive symptomatology for controls and a significant interaction effect between group and time β = 0.22, CI [ 0.115-0.331], indicating an increase in depressive symptoms for individuals with chronic conditions (β = -0.16 + β = 0.22 = 0.04). Moreover, individuals with chronic conditions were more likely to seek mental health treatment from a professional (doctor, psychiatrist, clinical psychologist) compared to those without a chronic condition (OR = 1.45, 95% CI [1.20, 1.75]). Individuals with chronic conditions exhibited increasing levels of depressive symptomatology across 2 years of the pandemic, highlighting the need for routine screening for depressive symptomatology in individuals with chronic conditions in primary care.

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/smi.70082

Type

Journal article

Journal

Stress Health

Publication Date

08/2025

Volume

41

Keywords

COVID‐19 pandemic, chronic condition, chronic illness, depression, longitudinal, Humans, COVID-19, Female, Male, Longitudinal Studies, Adult, Norway, Chronic Disease, Depression, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Pandemics