Affect and post-COVID-19 symptoms in daily life: An exploratory experience sampling study

Gerko Schaap*, Marleen Wensink, Carine J. M. Doggen, Job van der Palen, Harald E. Vonkeman, Christina Bode

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

Insight into the daily life experiences of patients with post-COVID-19 syndrome is lacking. The current study explored temporal fluctuations of and associations between positive and negative affect and symptoms throughout the day in previously hospitalised post-COVID-19 patients using an experience sampling methodology. Ten participants (age: median = 60, interquartile range = 9 years; 50% women; 80% ≥ 1 comorbidity; 8–12 months since hospital discharge) filled out brief online questionnaires, six times a day for 14 consecutive days.
Positive and negative affect, and self-reported symptoms (physical and mental fatigue, cognitive functioning, dyspnoea, and pain) were assessed in real-time. Primarily, graphs were analysed to assess the individual longitudinal courses of and (concurrent and time-lagged) associations between affect and symptoms. Secondly, correlations or multilevel linear regression models were used to support these interpretations. Visual assessment showed limited temporal fluctuation in affect and symptoms. All symptoms appeared to associate
positively with each other (correlations between .26 and .85). Positive affect was associated with lower symptoms severity (β’s between -.28 and -.67), and negative affect with higher symptoms severity (β’s between .24 and .66). Time-lagged analyses showed that–adjusted for residual symptom severity of prior measurements–both types of affect predicted symptom severity two hours later (β’s between -.09 and -.31 for positive affect; between .09 and .28 for negative affect). These findings suggest that positive and negative affect may play important roles in post-COVID-19 symptom experience and temporal fluctuation.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0295217
Number of pages12
JournalPLoS ONE
Volume19
Issue number10
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 24 Oct 2024

Keywords

  • Post-COVID-19 syndrome
  • Long COVID
  • Symptoms
  • Affect
  • Experience sampling methodology
  • Ecological momentary assessment

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