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Rev. Fac. Med. Hum ; 21(4): 809-818, Oct.-Dic. 2021.
Artigo em Inglês, Espanhol | LILACS-Express | LILACS | ID: biblio-1342244

RESUMO

Objetivos: Determinar los factores asociados al desarrollo de depresión, ansiedad y estrés en el contexto de la pandemia por COVID-19 en policías de Lima, Perú. Métodos: Estudio transversal analítico realizado en 210 policías a quienes se les aplicó la Escala de Depresión, Ansiedad y Estrés -DASS-21 en octubre de 2020, así como un formulario vía Google Forms para obtener datos sociodemográficos y clínicos. Se realizó análisis bivariado y multivariado, utilizando razones de prevalencia crudas y ajustadas, con un intervalo de confianza >95% y un nivel de significancia de p≤0.05. Resultados: Las prevalencias de depresión, ansiedad y estrés fueron 11.43%, 10% y 7.62%, respectivamente. En el análisis bivariado, la ansiedad se asoció con el número de hijos (RPc:3.18; IC95% [1.10-9.17]; p:0.032) y comorbilidades (RPc:2.50; IC95% [1.08-5.75]; p:0.031). Para depresión y estrés no se encontraron factores asociados significativamente. En el análisis multivariado se encontró una asociación entre depresión y edad (RPa:2.50; IC95%[1.02-6.10]; p:0.044), y entre estrés y situación sentimental (RPa:3.10; IC95%[1.08-8.95]; p:0.034), diagnóstico de COVID-19 (RPa:3.18; IC95%[1.02-9.92]; p:0.045) y comorbilidades (RPa:4.19; IC95%[1.22-14.36]; p:0.022). Conclusiones: Se observó una baja prevalencia de depresión, ansiedad y estrés en la población de estudio. Además, según análisis multivariado, los factores de riesgo de estrés fueron: ser soltero, haber sido diagnosticado con COVID-19 y tener comorbilidades, mientras que tener 40 años o menos fue un factor de riesgo de depresión.


Objectives: To determine the factors associated with the development of depression, anxiety and stress in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in police officers in Lima, Peru. Methods: Analytical cross-sectional study conducted in 210 police officers who were administered the Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 (DASS-21) in October 2020, as well as a form, via Google Forms, to obtain sociodemographic and clinical data. A bivariate and a multivariate analysis were performed using crude and adjusted prevalence ratios, with a confidence interval >95% and a significance level of p≤0.05. Results: Depression, anxiety and stress prevalence rates were 11.43%, 10% and 7.62%, respectively. In the bivariate analysis, anxiety was associated with the number of children (cPR:3.18; 95% CI [1.10-9.17]; p:0.032) and history of disease (cPR:2.50; 95%CI[1.08-5.75]; p:0.031). For depression and stress, no significantly associated factors were found. In the multivariate analysis, an association between depression and age (aPR:2.50; 95%CI[1.02-6.10]; p:0.044) was found, as well as an association between stress and emotional situation (aPR:3.10; 95%CI[1.08-8.95]; p:0.034), COVID-19 diagnosis (aPR:3.18; 95%CI[1.02-9.92]; p:0.045) and history of disease (aPR:4.19; 95%CI[1.22-14.36]; p:0.022). Conclusions: A low prevalence of depression, anxiety and stress was observed in the study population. In addition, according to the multivariate analysis, the risk factors for stress were being single, having been diagnosed with COVID-19 and having a history of disease, while being 40 years old or younger was a risk factor for depression.

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