Psychological impact of COVID-19 on the elderly population of a health area in Gran Canaria

Section: Originals

How to quote

Lorenzo Plasencia LM, González González YS. Impacto psicológico de la COVID-19 en población mayor de un área de salud de Gran Canaria. Metas Enferm oct 2023; 26(8):7-14. Doi: https://doi.org/10.35667/MetasEnf.2023.26.1003082157

Authors

Luz María Lorenzo Plasencia1, Yurena Sabrina González González2

Position

1Especialista en Enfermería Familiar y Comunitaria. Máster en Educación terapéutica en diabetes. Máster en Cuidados y curas de heridas crónicas. Centro Salud San Gregorio, Telde. Gran Canaria (España)2Máster de Investigación en Ciencias de la Enfermería. Centro Salud Valsequillo. Gran Canaria (España)

Contact address

Luz María Lorenzo Plasencia. C/ Lola Massieu s/n, 35200 Telde, Gran Canaria (España).

Contact email: llorpla@gobiernodecanarias.org

Abstract

Objective: to assess the psychological impact experienced by the elderly population of a basic health area in Gran Canaria (Spain), associated with the lockdown implemented on the occasion of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: a cross-sectional study (November 2021-March 2022). Simple random sample of adults who were 65 years old or older, users of the Telde-San Gregorio basic health area (Gran Canaria, Spain). Telephone surveys were conducted with the Questionnaire on the Psychological Impact of Coronavirus adapted by Sandín et al. (2020). Descriptive analysis with the SPSS statistical program, version 18.
Results: the survey included 178 elderly persons (mean age: 74.62 years). Of these, 62.9% (n= 112) was autonomous; 55.1% (n= 98) was in a stable situation according to chronicity classification; 28.1% (n= 50) lived alone; 10.7% (n= 19) had presented COVID-19 symptoms; 84.8% (n= 151) declared that they had not experienced major changes in their routine. The fear to infect a relative/loved one prevailed in 50.6% (n= 90) of elderly persons; 57.9% (n= 103) did not feel any fear/anxiety regarding coronavirus; 55.6% (n= 99) reported not feeling sadness / depression; 6.2% (n= 11) of elderly persons felt lonely / isolated, and 51.1% (n= 91) reported that they had felt upset for not being able to see some of the relatives they usually saw.
Conclusions: lockdown did not cause major changes in the routines of participants. There was a high level of compliance with preventive behaviours. More than half of the respondents expressed being very afraid that a relative would get infected. Lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic had a certain degree of psychological impact on the health of this age group

Versión en Español

Título:

Impacto psicológico de la COVID-19 en población mayor de un área de salud de Gran Canaria