We know from studies on collective trauma that mental health impacts tend to register when the immediate threat is over, and intensify after the 'honeymoon period' of everyone pulling together has passed. We haven't yet hit that point with Covid-19, even though people are tired.https://twitter.com/scotinoz/status/1298804638221656064 …
There's quite a lot of literature looking into the matter. One great example is firearms I.e.https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2530362 …
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I thought that might be the case. Gid, you need to be aware that *what works as a predictor in a statistical model* may not be *what actually explains the event in real life.* Psych autopsies (for all their flaws) repeatedly identify acute distress as the strongest predictor.
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