by Grace Powell
Covid-19, otherwise known as the coronavirus,
is the global pandemic that has stopped the world in its tracks. The impact it
is having on mental health is immense, as well as intensifying the experiences
of people struggling with mental illness in normal everyday life. May is mental
health awareness month and many feel deeply conflicted. While it feels wildly
inappropriate to discuss mental health in the face of a relentless global
threat to physical health, it’s also grossly apt.
Due to the nature of a national lockdown, many
people could not leave their homes except to buy food or exercise briefly. They
could not see their friends or family, or go to work, and despite the slight
relax in lockdown rules, the near-term outlook is still bleak. This combination
is the perfect storm for an increase in mental health conditions and we are
already beginning to see signs of an associated mental health pandemic on the
way.
For those struggling with anxiety, certain
fears they may have are heightened, therefore making mental and physical
responses more severe and harder to deal with. People who struggle with
depression may experience more suicidal thoughts with death counts constantly
being broadcasted on the news. For those who suffer with OCD, constantly being
told to do a compulsion they are trying to combat would be extremely mentally
draining. With post traumatic stress disorder, that feeling of having no
control can become significantly more overwhelming, and people with psychotic
disorders or hearing voices that are now orientating around the virus would be
consuming.
A recent poll from Young Minds Uk found that
80% of young people with mental health conditions have seen their conditions
worsen since the pandemic began. This shows us that Covid-19 and lockdown is
introducing more psychological consequences to many young people across the UK.
Despite all of this, everybody has a mental health and if someone is struggling
whether they have a mental illness or not, they are still a just as valid.
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