Young women experience more poor mental health at closing down cause of COVID-19

Poor mental health during the impasse was the most common among young women in Britain, suggests a University College London study (UCL). UCL researchers surveyed more than 18 thousand people in four groups - those aged 62, 50, 30 and 19 - in research conducted in May [...]
UCL researchers surveyed more than 18 thousand people in four groups - those aged 62, 50, 30, and 19 - in research conducted in May of this year during the closure of Great Britain due to COVID-19, reports CNN.
They found that weak mental health during the impasse was the most common among 19-year-olds and followed by 30-year-olds.
Women more than men experienced mental - health difficulties in all four categories of age, broadcasting Telegraph.
Over a third of women and a quarter of men in the mid-19-year-olds had symptoms of closing depression in May, and 45 percent of women and 42 percent of men said they were lonely during this time.
Scholars had data on the three oldest groups over the years, preaching pandemics.
They found that women aged 30 showed significant increases in mental health problems during the impasse, when compared with women aged 25.












