Depression, anxiety putting women on the verge of disease

If you have depression or anxiety, a disease could affect you rather severely

By Sadaf Naushad
|
January 28, 2026
Depression, anxiety putting women on the verge of disease

Are you one of the women who suffered from Covid? There is a shocking link that has appeared between the disease and depression, anxiety.

Older women who have a history of both depression and anxiety had a 78% higher risk of developing long COVID after a SARS-CoV-2 infection, according to University of California San Diego researchers in the January 27, 2026 online edition of the journal Menopause.

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“Some people have only anxiety. Some have only depression. When these conditions occur together, they usually indicate more severe mental illness,” says Wael Al-Delaimy, MD, PhD, senior author, professor at the Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science, UC San Diego.

"In this study, we measured the health of women over 20 years by analyzing data from the Women's Health Initiative. We found that older women with a combined history of both depression and anxiety, before the COVID-19 pandemic, were at the highest risk of long COVID complications,” the expert added.

Long COVID is a chronic condition in which people experience persistent symptoms that last three months or more after the initial infection.

While women with both long term depression and anxiety faced a 78 % greater risk of long COVID, their SARS-CoV-2 infection rates were not higher; only their risk of complications increased.

Higher anxiety scores increased the likelihood of long COVID symptoms such as fatigue, brain fog and shortness of breath.

Mental health history affected safety habits: Women with long term depression, or both depression and anxiety, were less likely to wear masks, wash hands or keep social distance.

Women who felt anxious during the early pandemic were slightly more likely to follow those rules as people experiencing mental health illnesses are vulnerable to other diseases and may have trouble following public health guidelines.

"We hope that by characterizing these mental health risk factors public health officials and policymakers can target preventative measures to those with the greatest need," said co-author William Bruno, MD, MPH, associate physician in the Department of Emergency Medicine at the UC San Diego School of Medicine.

“In addition, the community should stay vigilant and care for people who may be dealing with loneliness, isolation or existing mental illness should another pandemic or other isolating event occur,” Al-Delaimy concluded.

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