said Wednesday in the medical journal JAMA Network Open.The study did not ask about any diagnosis they might have received, and for many people, the problem is mostly angst rather than full-blown psychiatric illness.
But experts say the feeling is genuine and deserving of professional help.For some people, it stems from lost loved ones and the financial distress and social isolation the outbreak has caused.
Experts say Americans are also feeling anxiety over the racial and political upheaval of the past few months, though the BU study was conducted before the recent tumult.“There is no question that many people in the U.S.