International study: How has coronavirus affected people’s personal lives?

International study: How has coronavirus affected people’s personal lives?

Zafar Shah - December 10th, 2020

A new survey in 14 countries and regions looks at the impact of COVID-19 on people’s relationships and mental health

With COVID-19 having ravaged the planet for the past nine months or so, the toll the disease has taken in terms of lives and money is well-reported. But what is less well known is how the pandemic has affected people’s personal lives.

A new YouGov survey, conducted in 14 countries and regions, reveals the damage done to people’s personal lives across the world.

Romantic relationships

People in the UAE report the most negative impact on their romantic lives, with 24% saying that their relationship has become strained or even ended as a result of the virus. One in five Indonesians (21%) likewise say that the virus has taken a toll on their love life, as do 15% of Americans, Britons and Hong Kongers.

Danes are least likely to have been adversely affected, at 7%.

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Family relationships

While Danes’ love lives may have been least affected, their family relationships are another matter. Almost half (48%) of Danes say that their family relationships have become strained, or that they have even stopped talking to someone entirely, as a result of the disease.

This figure is far higher than in any other country, with Italy in second place at 29%. The Chinese are least likely to have experienced disharmony in the family since the pandemic began, at just 9%.

Friendships

Danes are also the most likely to say their friendships have taken a hit because of coronavirus, at 35% (joint with Indonesians).

Again, it is the Chinese who are least likely to have fallen out with their friends, at 9%.

Mental health

Britons are the most likely to say that the virus has negatively affected their mental health. Almost two thirds (65%) say they’ve found themselves more troubled over the course of the outbreak, slightly ahead of Hong Kongers (63%) and Italians (62%).

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Germans are the least likely to say the crisis has had a negative impact on their mental health, at 44% - the only country where this figure was lower than half.

In the UAE, more than half (55%) said the virus had a negative impact on their mental health. Only 23% reported no impact and far fewer (14%) said the impact on their mental health was positive.

Results based on a survey of around 19,000 respondents from the 14 surveyed markets between 2nd and 11th November, including 1020 respondents from the UAE