\ BIP! Finder for COVID-19 - Impact-based ranking

BIP! Finder for COVID-19

This version of BIP! Finder aims to ease the exploration of COVID-19-related literature by enabling ranking articles based on various impact metrics.

Last Update: 18 - 01 - 2023 (628506 entries)

Provided impact measures:
Popularity: Citation-based measure reflecting the current impact.
Influence: Citation-based measure reflecting the total impact.
Reader Attention: The current number of Mendeley readers.
Social Media Attention: The number of recent tweets related to this article.
*More details on these impact measures can be found here.
Score interpretations:
Exceptional score (in top 0.01%).
Substantial score (in top 1%).
Average score (in bottom 99%).
Score not available.
Main data sources:
CORD-19 dataset(1) (list of papers)
LitCovid hub(2) (list of papers)
PMC & PubMed (citations)
Mendeley (number of readers)
COVID-19-TweetIDs(3) (tweets)

Use:  Impact  Relevance & Impact
TitleVenueYearImpactSource
2351Mycophenolate-mofetil/prednisone/tacrolimus: COVID-19 infection: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2352AZD-1222: Immune thrombotic thrombocytopenia: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2353Tozinameran: Multisystem inflammatory syndrome in adults, respiratory failure and myocarditis: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2354Tozinameran: Multisystem inflammatory syndrome: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2355Multiple drugs: Lack of efficacy and off-label use: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2356Diazepam/olanzapine: Lack of efficacy and drowsiness: 2 case reports  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2357Multiple drugs: Lack of efficacy: 3 case reports  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2358Tisagenlecleucel: Prolonged neutropenia and thrombocytopenia: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2359Dexamethasone/etoposide: Lack of efficacy: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2360Aspirin/colchicine: Lack of efficacy: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2361Convalescent-anti-SARS-CoV-2-plasma: Lack of efficacy following off-label use: case report  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2362A survey of challenges and methods for Quality of Experience assessment of interactive VR applications  

User acceptance of virtual reality (VR) applications is dependent on multiple aspects, such as usability, enjoyment, and cybersickness. To fully realize the disruptive potential of VR technology in light of recent technological advancements (e.g., advanced headsets, immersive graphics), gaining a deeper understanding of underlying factors and dimensions impacting and contributing to the overall end-user experience is of great benefit to hardware manufacturers, software and content developers, and service providers. To provide insight into user behaviour and preferences, researchers conduct user studies exploring the influence of various user-, system-, and context-related factors on the overall Quality of Experience (QoE) and its dimensions. When planning and executing such studies, researchers are faced with numerous methodological challenges related to study design aspects, such as specification of dependant and independent variables, subjective and objective assessment methods, preparation of test materials, test environment, and participant recruitment. Approaching these challenges from a multidisciplinary perspective, this paper reviews different aspects of performing perception-based QoE assessment for interactive VR applications and presents options and recommendations for research methodology design. We provide an overview of different influence factors and dimensions that may affect the overall QoE, with a focus on presence, immersion, and discomfort. Furthermore, we address ethical and practical issues regarding participant choice and test material, present different assessment methods and measures commonly used in VR research, and discuss approaches to choosing study duration and location. Lastly, we provide a concise analysis of key challenges that need to be addressed in future studies centered around VR QoE.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2363Desenlaces clínicos en pacientes con diagnóstico de neumonía relacionada con SARS-CoV-2 manejados con cánula de alto flujo, una experiencia clínica. (Estudio CANALF)  

Introducción. La inclusión de los sistemas de soporte ventilatorio no invasivo en el manejo del SDRA en adultos durante la actual pandemia ha sido un salvavidas ante la carencia de recursos en la presente situación sanitaria internacional. Sistemas como la Cánula nasal de alto flujo han demostrado no ser solo un sistema ventilatorio temporal a la espera de una ventilación mecánica invasiva, sino, muy por el contrario se ha evidenciado que es una herramienta de terapia efectiva en el SDRA. Objetivo. Describir una guía fácil para el manejo de cánulas de alto flujo en pacientes hospitalizados con neumonía grave por criterios de ATS secundaria a SARS COV2-COVID 19. Materiales y métodos. El presente es un estudio observacional prospectivo monocéntrico, en el que se incluyeron a 59 pacientes, todos con diagnóstico de neumonía severa relacionada con el SARS-CoV-2 entre enero y abril de 2021. Los pacientes fueron manejados inicialmente en unidad de cuidado intermedio con cánula nasal de alto flujo (CNAF). Resultados. Se pudo demostrar que existe una correlación estadísticamente significativa entre edad >65 años y frecuencia respiratoria ≥28 con la mortalidad; así mismo, entre edad >50 años, NEWS >6 y nuevamente frecuencia respiratoria ≥28 con el fracaso en el tratamiento. Conclusiones. La CNAF en el contexto de insuficiencia respiratoria relacionada a SArs-Cov2, debe convertirse en una alternativa viable de manejo en particular en entornos con acceso limitado a los recursos de la unidad de cuidados intensivos. Introduction. The inclusion of non-invasive ventilatory support systems in the management of ARDS in adults during the current pandemic, has been a lifeline given the lack of resources in the current international health situation. Systems such as the high flow nasal cannula have proven not to be just a temporary ventilatory system while awaiting invasive mechanical ventilation, on the contrary it has been shown that the high flow nasal cannula is an effective therapy tool in ARDS. Objective. To provide an easy guideline for the management of high-flow cannulas in hospitalized patients with severe pneumonia due to ATS criteria secondary to SARS COV2-COVID 19. Materials and methods. This is a prospective, single-centre observational study, including 59 patients, all with a diagnosis of SARS-CoV-2-related pneumonia between January and April 2021. The patients were initially managed in an intermediate care unit with high nasal cannula flow (HFNC). Results. We were able to show that there is a statistically significant correlation between age> 65 years and respiratory rate ≥28 and mortality; likewise, between age> 50 years, NEWS> 6 and again a respiratory rate ≥28 with treatment failure. Conclusions. HFNC in respiratory failure related to coronavirus disease 2019 should become a viable management alternative, particularly in settings with limited access to intensive care unit resources, taking the indications into account and recognizing that a high percentage of patients who receive it can be successfully weaned without the need for invasive mechanical ventilation.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2364Avis palliatifs aux urgences durant la première vague COVID-19: quels bénéfices ? Une étude auprès des urgentistes  

En matière de collaboration entre les équipes d’urgences et celles de soins palliatifs de l’hôpital Saint-Louis (AP-HP, Paris), l’irruption brutale du SARS-CoV-2 et ses conséquences sur l’afflux de patients et l’organisation des soins ont, pour un temps au moins, changé la donne. Contraints par la nécessité du moment, et sous l’impulsion de l’équipe mobile de soins palliatifs, l’absence d’échanges structurés a fait place à un échange quotidien au sein de l’unité d’hospitalisation des urgences afin d’anticiper un éventuel appel, de recenser sur place les patients pouvant bénéficier d’un avis et d’une prise en charge palliatifs, mais également d’accompagner les urgentistes et les soignants présents. Au-delà de la description des patients ainsi pris en charge et du bénéfice en termes de prise en charge palliative, une étude qualitative réalisée auprès des urgentistes nous permet d’évaluer le bénéfice réel et ressenti et d’affirmer qu’une présence renforcée de l’EMASP aux urgences permet une meilleure utilisation de ces ressources et une modification subséquente du parcours de certains patients. Ce travail met en évidence la contribution fondamentale que peut apporter une équipe mobile de soins palliatifs à la prise en charge des patients aux urgences et au mieux-être d’équipes quotidiennement confrontées à la fin de vie. Il fait néanmoins apparaitre un défaut patent de culture palliative aux urgences ainsi qu’un manque de réflexe de recours à ce type d’expertise alors que les bénéfices en sont unanimement reconnus, et ouvre ainsi la porte au développement conjoint d’une véritable médecine palliative de l’aigu. At Paris' Saint-Louis hospital, the collaboration and organisation of the ER teams and those from the palliative care units was completely transformed, at least for a time, by the brutal arrival of SARS-CoV-2. Faced with the necessity of the moment, and initiated by the mobile palliative care team, the absence of structured exchanges of information was replaced with a daily briefing within the ER hospitalisation unit, with the aim of anticipating a possible request to quantify any patients requiring evaluation and palliative care on-site, as well as accompanying the ER doctors and other medical staff present. Beyond describing the patients taken into care under this system, and the benefits in terms of palliative care, a qualitative study conducted with ER doctors allowed us to evaluate the real and perceived benefits, and to conclude that a greater presence of the mobile accompaniment and palliative care team at ER allows for better use of their resources and a subsequent modification of the care pipeline for certain patients. This work shows the fundamental contribution that a mobile palliative care team can make in receiving and treating ER patients, while also improving the experience of the teams faced daily with individuals at the end of their lives. However, it also brings to light a patent lack of palliative care culture in ER services, as well as the absence of a reflex to make use of this type of expertise systematically, despite the benefits being universally acknowledged, opening the way for the joint development of veritable palliative care for acute cases.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2365Effet du télétravail sur la santé psychologique et la performance des travailleurs durant la pandémie de la Covid-19  

The aim of this study was to examine how the widespread use of telework during the COVID-19 pandemic may have created a specific work context influencing employees' psychological health and performance. Results of analyses conducted on a sample of 3771 Canadian teleworkers revealed that telework created additional demands such as task interdependence and professionnal isolation. These demands had negative effects on telework performance by increasing the frequency of perceived stress. However, the presence of resources such as organizational support appeared to play a buffering role in moderating the direct effect of professionnal isolation on telecommuting performance.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2366La première vague de la COVID-19 n'est pas à l'origine d'un allongement des délais de prise en charge en cancérologie tête et cou. Expérience d'un center expert en France  

Contexte: Les cancers des voies aérodigestives supérieures (VADS) présentent un pronostic de survie péjoratif en raison de tumeurs diagnostiquées à des stades avancés chez des patients consultant tardivement. Le premier confinement lié à la 1ère vague de COVID-19 (CoronaVirus Disease 2019) a été à l’origine d’une perturbation des délais de consultation en France. Objectif: l’objectif principal de notre travail était d’analyser certains délais médian de consultation en cancérologie des VADS au cours et après cette période de confinement dans notre centre expert universitaire référent en cancérologie, en France, afin de rechercher un allongement des délais de prise en charge. Méthodes: une étude rétrospective monocentrique de patients primo-diagnostiqués, a été mené. Nous avons analysé trois groupes : un groupe « confinement », un groupe « post-confinement » et un groupe « contrôle », ce dernier correspondant à une période de référence un an auparavant. Les délais entre la première consultation et la réunion de concertation pluridisciplinaire (PC-RCP) et entre la RCP et le premier traitement (RCP-TT) étaient relevés. Résultats: Cent sept patients ont été inclus dans le groupe « contrôle », 60 dans le groupe « confinement » et 74 dans le groupe « post-confinement ». Il n’est pas mis en évidence d’augmentation du délai PC-RCP (respectivement 35, 29 et 28 jours), entre les groupes « confinement » et « post-confinement » comparés au groupe « contrôle » (respectivement p=0,2298 et p=0,0153). Il n’est pas mis en évidence d’augmentation du délai RCP-TT (27, 20 et 26 jours respectivement), entre les groupes « confinement » et « post-confinement » comparés au groupe « contrôle » (p=0,4203). Conclusion: Nous ne semblons pas observer d’allongement des délais de prise en charge PC-RCP et RCP-TT au cours des périodes « confinement » et « post-confinement » dans notre centre.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2367Interplay of All Drive Types  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2368Publishing and Library E-Lending: An Analysis of the Decade Before Covid-19  

This paper delves into the complex history of e-lending, specifically between the Big Five publishers and public libraries. It is commonly thought that the relationship between publishers and libraries is contentious, with publishers being obvious aggressors who see libraries as their enemy. The reality is not so clear cut. This paper aims to comprehensively document and analyze the history of the publisher-library relationship in the decade before COVID-19—specifically focusing on the individual relationships that formed between libraries and each publisher, the sales and e-lending trends during that time, and the media’s role in painting the publishers collectively as libraries’ rivals—so readers can understand the significance of the March 2020 library closures and the transition to a fully digital library lending world.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2369Impact analysis of COVID-19 pandemic on the electricity demand, frequency control and electromechanical oscillation modes of the Brazilian Interconnected Power System using low voltage WAMS data  

COVID-19 pandemic presented unique features among the range of threats encountered over the last century. Its impact echoes throughout the world affecting societies and their patterns of behavior, hence affecting the usage of electricity and the operation of power systems. This paper provides an analysis of the impact of COVID-19 Pandemic on the electricity demand, frequency control and electromechanical oscillation modes of the Brazilian Interconnected Power System (BIPS), taking into account public data disclosed by the Brazilian Independent System Operator (BISO) and data acquired through the MedFasee Project, the Brazilian low voltage wide area monitoring system (WAMS) leaded by the Federal University of Santa Catarina. Main results indicate that the BISO has been successful on controlling the system frequency and the main electromechanical interarea modes, despite the occurrence of a significant demand reduction in the BIPS in a certain period of time due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The total time of operation in underfrequency or overfrequency registered during the months with most demand reduction is at most 20% lower than the maximum time registered in the other months studied. The damping of the modes observed in the months with demand reduction has not reached values lower than 10% and the frequencies of oscillation have varied in a range of 0.05Hz, in agreement to what has been observed in other months.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2370PO-706-05 DECREASE IN ACTIVITY OF DAILY LIVING DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC CORRELATES WITH A DECREASE IN BIOMETRIC VARIABLES  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2371PO-631-08 REAL-TIME INTERACTIVE 3D SIMULATION OF TEMPORARY CARDIAC PACING  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2372PO-703-02 DIGITAL HEALTH DEVICE DEMONSTRATES THE LONG-TERM IMPACT OF COVID-19 ON THE CARDIOVASCULAR AND AUTONOMIC SYSTEM  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2373PO-701-02 SUDDEN CARDIAC ARREST DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC IN HISPANIC AND NON-HISPANIC RESIDENTS OF A WEST COAST COUNTY  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2374PO-679-06 SAME DAY DISCHARGE AND 30 DAY READMISSION AFTER ATRIAL FIBRILLATION ABLATION BEFORE AND DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC IN A TWO HOSPITAL HEALTHCARE SYSTEM  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2375PO-700-01 IMPACT OF VACCINATION STATUS ON QRS AMPLITUDE DIMINUTION IN PATIENTS HOSPITALIZED WITH COVID-19  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2376Test Technology Newsletter  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2377PO-671-05 ATRIAL ARRHYTHMIAS ASSOCIATED WITH INCREASED MORTALITY IN PATIENTS HOSPITALIZED WITH COVID-19  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2378CE-541-02 POST-COVID AND POSTURAL ORTHOSTATIC TACHYCARDIA SYNDROME  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2379CE-541-04 CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIAS IN POST-ACUTE SEQUELAE OF SARS-COV-2 INFECTION ASSESSED BY AMBULATORY RHYTHM MONITORING  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2380PO-718-02 IMPLEMENTING SYSTEMATIC SCREENING DRIVEN BY QUALITY IMPROVEMENT EDUCATION (QIE) FOR ATRIAL FIBRILLATION DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC: INSIGHT FROM PRIMARY CARE SETTING IN THE UNITED STATES  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2381PO-620-05 ARRHYTHMIC EVENTS IN PATIENTS WITH CARDIAC IMPLANTABLE ELECTRONIC DEVICE post-COVID-19 VACCINE  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2382PO-653-03 DELAYED CARDIAC REPOLARIZATION AS A PREDICTOR OF IN-HOSPITAL MORTALITY IN COVID-19 PATIENTS  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2383PO-697-03 CATHETER ABLATION OF ATRIAL FIBRILLATION IN THE AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTER DURING THE SARS-COV-2 PANDEMIC  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2384PO-672-07 ASYSTOLE WITH REMDESIVIR IN A PATIENT WITH LIMB-GIRDLE MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2385PO-689-05 PREDICTORS OF ARRHYTHMIA OCCURRENCE IN HOSPITALIZED COVID-19 PATIENTS  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2386PO-632-07 EFFECTIVENESS OF THE WEARABLE CARDIOVERTER DEFIBRILLATOR IN PATIENTS WITH COVID-19  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2387AP-519-01 A MULTIDISCIPLINARY APPROACH TO SAME DAY DISCHARGE OF PATIENTS POST ATRIAL FIBRILLATION ABLATION  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2388PO-625-08 NEW ATRIAL FIBRILLATION DURING ACUTE COVID-19 INFECTION PREDICTS DEVELOPMENT OF FUTURE CLINICAL ATRIAL FIBRILLATION  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2389PO-689-04 IMPACT OF COVID-19 VACCINATION STATUS ON PREPROCEDURAL EP LAB SCREENING  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2390CE-541-01 OUTCOMES IN PATIENTS WITH COVID-19 COMPLICATED BY HIGH GRADE ATRIOVENTRICULAR BLOCK  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2391PO-697-06 INTERVENTIONAL ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY IN THE AMBULATORY SURGICAL CENTER DURING SARS-COV-2 PANDEMIC  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2392CE-541-03 OCCURRENCE OF ATRIAL FIBRILLATION AFTER RECEIVING A SARS- COV-2 VACCINE: REPORT FROM CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL AND PREVENTION VAERS DATABASE  

Heart Rhythm2022       CORD-19
2393Recommendations of the Valencian Society of Digestive Pathology for the use of telemedicine and non-contact consultations  

The COVID-19 pandemic has meant a qualitative change in the way patients are treated in outpatient clinics. The need to take measures of social isolation as prevention for contagion by the new coronavirus has forced the use of telematic and telephone consultations in most medical and surgical units. The specialty of digestive medicine, due to the characteristics of its patients and frequent support in complementary techniques for diagnosis, is especially suitable for the use of non-contact consultations. In this document a series of recommendations are proposed that can serve as a guide for the establishment or improvement of non-face-to-face digestive medicine consultations.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2394Opening Note: The Golden Jubilee of the Institute of Mathematics and Statistics of the University of São Paulo  

N/A2022       CORD-19
2395Dynamic associations between stress and relationship functioning in the wake of COVID-19: Longitudinal data from the German family panel (pairfam)  

Individuals all across the world experienced significant disruptions in their personal and family life with the outbreak of the new coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The current study investigated dynamic associations between stress and relationship functioning over time in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic. Perceived stress, relationship satisfaction, and relationship quality (appreciation, intimacy, conflict) were reported by 1483 young to middle-aged participants who were in a romantic relationship and lived with their partner in 2018/2019 and in May–July 2020 (a few months after the onset of COVID-19). Data were analyzed using bivariate latent change score models. Relationship functioning (satisfaction, appreciation, intimacy) showed small decreases from before to during the pandemic. Contrary to expectations, levels of perceived stress also decreased on average from before to during the pandemic. Changes in relationship functioning were correlated with changes in stress over time, so that participants with greater decreases in relationship satisfaction, appreciation, and intimacy and greater increases in conflict from before to during the pandemic showed lesser decreases/greater increases in stress. Higher pre-pandemic relationship satisfaction was associated with greater decreases/lesser increases in stress from before to during the pandemic. Pre-pandemic levels of other measures of relationship functioning or stress were not associated with changes in outcomes over time. Results add to the literature demonstrating that stress is closely intertwined with the functioning of intimate relationships. Furthermore, they suggest that greater relationship satisfaction may serve as a protective factor for stressful life events.

J Soc Pers Relat2022       CORD-19
2396Risk and resilience in couple's adjustment to the COVID-19 pandemic  

The COVID-19 pandemic’s global scope and resulting social distancing measures have caused unprecedented economic, lifestyle, and social impacts to personal and relationship well-being. While lockdowns have prompted individuals to increase reliance on intimate partners for support, stressful external contexts can also interfere with partners’ capacity to request and provide support, resulting in relationship dissatisfaction and even dissolution. Guided by a risk and resilience framework, this study examined the impact of perceived stress, social contextual factors, and dyadic coping on self-reported relationship satisfaction changes during the initial United States COVID-19 lockdown period. Participants were adults in romantic relationships who completed an online survey between April 13 and June 8, 2020. Overall, survey respondents (N = 1106) reported higher perceived stress levels than established population norms, and small but significant decrements in relationship satisfaction. Multivariable models revealed that higher perceived stress levels were associated with lower relationship satisfaction levels. Additionally, dyadic coping was found to moderate the impact of perceived stress on relationship satisfaction (B = .05, 95% CI = .02– .07), suggesting that engaging in dyadic coping buffered individuals from adverse effects of perceived stress on their relationships. Findings emphasize heightened stress experienced by individuals during the pandemic, potential detrimental effects of stress on couple relationships, and suggest dyadic coping may help buffer couples from adverse effects of the pandemic on their relationships. As such, dyadic coping may be an important target for future interventions designed to assist couples during the ongoing pandemic and future pandemics/natural disasters.

J Soc Pers Relat2022       CORD-19
2397The Influence of University Recreation Centers on Student Return and Retention during COVID-19  

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, university and college student enrollment has decreased by slightly more than 5% from fall 2019 to the present. While previous studies have revealed that student involvement in recreation center activities increases return and retention at college campuses, are these results still true during the COVID-19 pandemic? The results indicated that students agreed they returned and planned to remain at the university due to a sense of belonging created from involvement in recreation center activities. The results also revealed significant relationships between underclassmen and a sense of belonging from participating in recreation center activities. Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, it is estimated that universities may lose between $17-$30 billion by 2025. From an applied viewpoint, the results offer information for university administrators to better understand how a student recreation center may attract and retain students during this unstable time in the United States higher education.

N/A2022       CORD-19
2398Evaluation of physician-patient relationship and bioethical principles in COVID-19 patients  

The COVID-19 pandemic has impacted medical care in many ways; previously, a patient would enter a hospital and had an approximate idea of what would happen upon his admission, the physician informed them about it, but in the last two years this scenario has changed. Therefore, our aim was to identify if bioethical principles are present in the physician–patient relationship and the effect of these in the health care provided, through an observational and descriptive study where patients answered the validated ReMePaB questionnaire that measures the presence of bioethical principles in the physician–patient relationship, on the seventh day of their hospital stay and 24 h after discharge, during the period from 1 August to 5 November 2020. In autonomy, an improvement in the score was observed in the second application compared to the first measurement; in the principle of non-vulnerability, the same scenario was observed for the first and second measurements, respectively. In the principles of beneficence, dignity, and justice, no statistically significant differences were observed. Considering the presence or absence of bioethical aspects in health care in this pandemic creates an area of opportunity to know the feelings of the patient during the care received and to maintain what is done well and improve those aspects that can be improved.

Clin Ethics2022       CORD-19
2399Prepandemic relationship satisfaction is related to post-pandemic COVID-19 anxiety: A four-wave study in China  

The COVID-19 pandemic has had lasting impacts on people’s interpersonal relationship and mental health. Using four-wave data in China (N = 222, 54.50% female, M(age) = 31.53, SD = 8.17), the current study examined whether prepandemic relationship satisfaction was related to postpandemic COVID-19 anxiety through midpandemic perceived social support and/or gratitude. The results showed that people’s COVID-19 anxiety decreased from the peak to the trough stage of the pandemic; perceived social support increased markedly from prepandemic to the peak and remained stable subsequently, while relationship satisfaction remained unchanged throughout. Further, it was midpandemic perceived social support, not gratitude, that mediated the association between prepandemic relationship satisfaction and postpandemic COVID-19 anxiety, indicating that perceived social support played a crucial role in this process. Finally, it is suggested that perceived social support should be distinguished from gratitude as two different components of social interactions.

J Soc Pers Relat2022       CORD-19
2400News  

N/A2022       CORD-19

(1) COVID-19 Open Research Dataset (CORD-19). 2020. Version 2022-06-02. Retrieved from https://ai2-semanticscholar-cord-19.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/historical_releases.html. Accessed 2022-06-05. doi:10.5281/zenodo.3715506
(2) Chen Q, Allot A, & Lu Z. (2020) Keep up with the latest coronavirus research, Nature 579:193 and Chen Q, Allot A, Lu Z. LitCovid: an open database of COVID-19 literature. Nucleic Acids Research. 2020. (version 2023-01-10)
(3) Currently tweets of June 23rd to June 29th 2022 have been considered.

This service is provided "as is", without any warranties of any kind.