Those who followed the restrictions most closely when the pandemic hit are the most likely to be suffering from stress, anxiety and depression, academics at Bangor University have found.
Communal types displayed the highest levels of continuing disturbance to their mental wellbeing. However, agentic people had been able to bounce back better from lockdown mode.
Willegers, an academic at Bangor University's institute for the psychology of elite performance, said some people found it hard to make the transition from receiving regular exhortations about following public health advice during the pandemic to no advice when lockdown ended.
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