• Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Condition
  • Archive

ARK Foundation

  • Home
  • About
    • About Organization
    • Our Partners
    • Global Networks & Leadership
  • Our Team
    • Advisor
    • Executive Director
    • Research and Development
    • Research Uptake & Communications
    • Programme and Training
    • Finance and Administration
    • Data and Field Management
  • Our Work
    • Communicable Disease
    • Non-communicable Disease
    • Multimorbidity
    • Antimicrobial Resistance
    • Maternal, Newborn, Child and Reproductive Health
    • Nutrition
    • Health Systems
    • Climate Change and Environment
    • Gender, Equity and Social Inclusion
  • News & Media
    • Event
    • News
    • Blog
    • Video
    • Newsletter
  • Resources
    • Journal Article
    • Report
    • Working Paper
    • Project Brief
    • Policy Brief
    • Conference Proceedings
    • Infographics
    • Posters
  • Career
  • Contact
/ Published in Journal Article, Resources

Knowledge and Response to the COVID-19 Pandemic in People With Severe Mental Illness in Bangladesh and Pakistan: A Cross-Sectional Survey

Background: People with severe mental illnesses (SMIs) are likely to face disproportionate challenges during a pandemic. They may not receive or be able to respond to public health messages to prevent infection or to limit its spread. Additionally, they may be more severely affected, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

Methods: We conducted a telephone survey (May–June 2020) in a sample of 1,299 people with SMI who had attended national mental health institutes in Bangladesh and Pakistan before the pandemic. We collected information on top worries, socioeconomic impact of the pandemic, knowledge of COVID-19 (symptoms, prevention), and prevention-related practices (social distancing, hygiene). We explored the predictive value of socio-demographic and health-related variables for relative levels of COVID-19 knowledge and practice using regularized logistic regression models.

Findings: Mass media were the major source of information about COVID-19. Finances, employment, and physical health were the most frequently mentioned concerns. Overall, participants reported good knowledge and following advice. In Bangladesh, being female and higher levels of health-related quality of life (HRQoL) predicted poor and better knowledge, respectively, while in Pakistan being female predicted better knowledge. Receiving information from television predicted better knowledge in both countries. In Bangladesh, being female, accessing information from multiple media sources, and better HRQoL predicted better practice. In Pakistan, poorer knowledge of COVID-19 prevention measures predicted poorer practice.

Conclusion: Our paper adds to the literature on people living with SMIs and their knowledge and practices relevant to COVID-19 prevention. Our results emphasize the importance of access to mass and social media for the dissemination of advice and that the likely gendered uptake of both knowledge and practice requires further attention.

PDF Version | HTML Version

What you can read next

Tobacco use in people with severe mental illness: Findings from a multi-country survey of mental health institutions in South Asia
Addressing antimicrobial resistance through community engagement: a framework for developing contextually relevant and impactful behaviour change interventions
Perspectives on reforming the tobacco tax administration system in Bangladesh to enhance public health

Recent Posts

  • Air Pollution is Changing: The Hidden Climate Risks We are Not Talking About

    Read the blog here or download the PDF version ...
  • mHealth intervention (mTB-Tobacco) for smoking cessation in people with drug-sensitive pulmonary tuberculosis in Bangladesh and Pakistan: protocol for an adaptive design, cluster randomised controlled trial (Quit4TB)

    Read the article here or download the PDF versi...
  • Gender differences in mental health help-seeking behaviour in Bangladesh: findings from a cross-sectional online survey

    Read the article here or download PDF version A...
  • Designing a strategic purchasing framework for urban primary healthcare services in Bangladesh: a protocol for a mixed-method study with a discrete choice experiment

    Find the article here or download PDF version A...
  • Expansion of low-price cigarette market and its implications for cigarette tax revenue: Evidence from Bangladesh

    Read the article here or download the PDF versi...
  • Engaging rural communities in Bangladesh to address antimicrobial resistance via the community dialogue approach: a protocol for a cluster-randomized controlled trial

    Read the article here or download the PDF versi...
  • Associations between sociodemographic characteristics and knowledge about antibiotics and antibiotic resistance and usage of antibiotics from a One Health perspective in rural Bangladesh: a descriptive cross-sectional study

    Find the article here or download the PDF versi...
  • Perceived barriers and the price inflating effects of informal payments in fresh food retailing in urban Bangladesh

    Find it here or download the PDF version  ...
  • Facilitators and challenges to access fresh fruits and vegetables in a low to middle income group in Bangladesh: Consumers’ perception

    Find it here or download the PDF version Abstra...
  • How prepared are urban primary care facilities to manage hypertension and type 2 diabetes in Dhaka, Bangladesh? A cross-sectional descriptive study of government urban dispensaries and NGO clinics

    Find the article here or download the PDF versi...
  • Tobacco cessation intervention for individuals with severe mental illness in Bangladesh, India, and Pakistan: protocol for a multi-country feasibility randomised controlled trial (SCIMITAR-SA)

    Read the article here or download the PDF versi...
  • When Cities Grow, Movement Shrinks: Urbanisation and Physical Activity in Bangladesh

    Find the PDF here Written by Riona Khan and S M...
  • Patient and provider perspectives of pluralistic primary care services in urban Bangladesh: a qualitative study

    Read it here or find PDF here Abstract Backgrou...
  • The Karlson-Holm-Breen (KHB) Method: Why Logistic Mediation Results Might Be Misleading?

    Read pdf here Written by Ibrahim Hasan and S M ...
  • South Asian Coalition of Policy and Evidence for Equitable food systems (SCOPE)

    The South Asian Coalition of Policy and Evidenc...
  • Fragmentation in urban health service provision? A plurality of providers is the answer

    Read it here or download PDF  Abdullah Rafi, fr...
  • International Women’s Day 2026

      When women give knowledge, care, and lea...
  • In-country public-private partnerships hold the key to promoting inclusiveness in Dutch trade and international cooperation agenda

    Read the PDF here...
  • COVID-19 and Tobacco

    Read the PDF here  ...
  • Taxation on Sugar-Sweetened Beverages (SSBs) in Bangladesh: What should we do?

    Read the PDF here...

Empower Your Career with ARK Foundation

Discover opportunities to make a difference in health, education, gender equality, and environmental sustainability.

JOIN US

ARK Foundation is a non-government, non-political and not-for-profit organization dedicated to the socio-economic development of Bangladesh. Through evidence-based research, training and communications it provides sustainable solutions for health, education and social development.

ADDRESS

Suite A-1, C-3 & C-4, House # 06, Road # 109,
Gulshan-2, Dhaka, Bangladesh, 1212

Phone: +88 02 55069866

Email: info@arkfoundationbd.org

LOCATION

  • GET SOCIAL

© 2025. All rights reserved. ARK Foundation.

TOP