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Comparing Self-Reported Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression Among Canadian Post-Secondary Students to the General Canadian Population During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Repeated Cross-Sectional Trend Analysis
by
Stuart, Heather
, Linden, Brooke
, Boyes, Randall
, Ecclestone, Amy
2025
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Comparing Self-Reported Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression Among Canadian Post-Secondary Students to the General Canadian Population During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Repeated Cross-Sectional Trend Analysis
by
Stuart, Heather
, Linden, Brooke
, Boyes, Randall
, Ecclestone, Amy
2025
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Comparing Self-Reported Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression Among Canadian Post-Secondary Students to the General Canadian Population During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Repeated Cross-Sectional Trend Analysis
Journal Article
Comparing Self-Reported Symptoms of Anxiety and Depression Among Canadian Post-Secondary Students to the General Canadian Population During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Repeated Cross-Sectional Trend Analysis
2025
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Overview
Over the past decade, and in particular since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, increasing proportions of Canadian post-secondary students have reported experiencing symptoms of mental illnesses and psychological distress, including anxiety and depression. The present study aims to describe trends in self-reported anxiety and depression reported by students during the COVID-19 pandemic period of February 2021 to January/February 2023 and to assess whether there were significant differences in these outcomes between students and the general adult population. A secondary analysis of a repeated measures cross-sectional dataset collected by Mental Health Research Canada (MHRC) was conducted to assess self-reported symptoms of anxiety and depression using the GAD-7 and PHQ-9 scales. Generalized linear models were used to assess how the prevalence of mental health symptoms changed over time, stratified by students compared to the general population. Generally, the proportion of respondents who screened positive for anxiety or depression was higher among the student compared to the general population across time points. Female respondents also had higher average scores on both scales compared to male counterparts. Proportions screening positive for both anxiety and depression were not significantly different over time points. Findings suggest Canadian post-secondary students experience higher levels of anxiety and depression compared to the general population, with females and students scoring particularly high on mental health assessments. It highlights the need for further research on the ongoing impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on student mental health and the importance of continuing mental health assessments through future MHRC polling.
Comparing Anxiety and Depression Symptoms in Canadian Post-Secondary Students to the General Population During the COVID-19 Pandemic: A National Trend Analysis
This study looked at how anxiety and depression levels among Canadian college and university students have changed from February 2021 to early 2023 during the COVID-19 pandemic. It found that students generally reported higher levels of these mental health concerns compared to the general adult population, with there not being significant changes in scores over time. These results highlight the significant mental health challenges faced by students and the need for continued research and monitoring to understand and address these issues better.
Publisher
SAGE Publishing
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