Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/41212
Título : The impact of COVID-19 on mental health: the interactive roles of brain biotypes and human connection
Autor: Hagerty, Sarah L.
Williams, Leanne M.
Palavras-chave: COVID-19
Precision psychiatry
Personalized medicine
Neural taxonomies
Social connection
Publicador: Elsevier
Data da publicação: Mai-2020
Referência: HAGERTY, S. L.; WILLIAMS, L. M. The impact of COVID-19 on mental health: the interactive roles of brain biotypes and human connection. Brain, Behavior, & Immunity-Health, [S.l.], v. 5, May 2020.
Abstract: COVID-19 along with the mitigation strategies being used to address the virus pose significant threats to our individual and collective mental health. As the crisis evolves and persists, it will be increasingly important for the research community to conduct investigations that address the mental health consequences of COVID-19. The causes of mental health effects in the context of COVID-19 are multifactorial and likely include biological, behavioral, and environmental determinants. We argue that the COVID-19 crisis significantly threatens our basic human need for human connection, which might serve as a crucial environmental factor that could underlie the overall insult to our mental health. Furthermore, “brain styles,” which we have previously conceptualized as “biotypes” that are informed by a neural taxonomy, might interact with the universal threat to our need for human connection to explain the mental health consequences of COVID-19 from a precision psychiatry perspective. The goal of this viewpoint is to inspire research on the mental health consequences of COVID-19 from an individualized, brain-based perspective that honors the profound threat that the virus poses to our basic human motivations.
URI: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666354620300430
http://repositorio.ufla.br/jspui/handle/1/41212
Idioma: en_US
Aparece nas coleções:FCS - Artigos sobre Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19)

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