The Impact of Fear of COVID-19 on Mood and Health During the First COVID-19 Lockdown Period in The Netherlands

Publication date

2025-11

Authors

Kiani, Pantea
Hendriksen, Pauline A.
Dijkgraaf, Dana M.
Merlo, Agnese
Zijlstra, Maureen N.
Garssen, JohanORCID 0000-0002-8678-9182ISNI 0000000034097251
Bruce, Gillian
Scholey, Andrew
Verster, J.C.ORCID 0000-0002-6455-2096ISNI 0000000076939752

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

unspecified

Abstract

Background: Fear of COVID-19 has been associated with adverse mental and physical health outcomes, yet evidence from The Netherlands is limited. This study investigated associations between fear of COVID-19, mood, quality of life, immune fitness, and related health variables during the first Dutch national lockdown and identified key predictors of fear. Methods: In June–July 2020, n = 1020 Dutch adults completed an online survey assessing demographics, personality, mental resilience, pain sensitivity, pain catastrophizing, alcohol use, immune fitness, and mood. Retrospective ratings were provided for the pre-pandemic period (January–March 2020) and the first lockdown (March–May 2020). Fear of COVID-19 was measured using a modified Fear of COVID-19 Scale. Results: Overall, 13.2% of participants reported significant fear of COVID-19, which was associated with poorer mood, reduced quality of life, lower immune fitness, more severe COVID-19 symptoms, greater pain sensitivity, and higher levels of pain catastrophizing. Regression analysis explained 19.6% of the variance, with pre-pandemic anxiety (8.7%) and poorer immune fitness (3.4%) as the strongest predictors of fear of COVID-19, followed by lower psychoticism, lower mental resilience, older age, greater helplessness, and greater extraversion. Discussion: These findings suggest that a minority experienced high levels of fear of COVID-19 with substantial consequences, including negative effects on mood, immune fitness, and quality of life. The strong association with pre-existing anxiety and immune fitness highlights the need for early identification and targeted interventions for vulnerable groups to reduce psychological and physical health impacts in future public health crises.

Keywords

COVID-19 fear, The Netherlands, immune fitness, lockdown, mental health, pain catastrophizing, pre-pandemic anxiety, resilience, Medicine (miscellaneous), Immunology and Microbiology (miscellaneous), Infectious Diseases

Citation

Kiani, P, Hendriksen, P A, Dijkgraaf, D M, Merlo, A, Zijlstra, M N, Garssen, J, Bruce, G, Scholey, A & Verster, J C 2025, 'The Impact of Fear of COVID-19 on Mood and Health During the First COVID-19 Lockdown Period in The Netherlands', COVID, vol. 5, no. 11, 186. https://doi.org/10.3390/covid5110186