Covid-19 anxiety in Victoria is being felt Australia-wide with feelings of anxiety and depression being shared across the country, according to data released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics.

ABS head of Household Surveys, Michelle Marquardt said while Victoria has experienced the greatest surge in recent cases of Covid-19, the latest Household Impacts of Covid-19 Survey showed that the effects on how Australians are feeling are country-wide. “The mid-August results were consistent across Australia with no significant differences reported by people in Victoria when compared to the rest of Australia,” she said.

The survey was conducted in mid-August, at a time when daily new cases of coronavirus in Victoria led to strong restrictions in the state and extra caution across Australia.

The survey asked Australians about feelings that impact on emotional and mental wellbeing. This included how often people felt nervous, hopeless, restless or fidgety, worthless, that everything was an effort, or so depressed that nothing could cheer them up.

Over two in five Australians reported feeling nervous (46 per cent); restless or fidgety (41 per cent) and that everything was an effort (41 per cent) at least some of the time in the previous four weeks.

The survey also followed up on precautions being taken because of the spread of Covid-19 and participation in selected activities over the past week and these results did show marked differences between Victoria and the rest of the country, Marquardt said.

“People in Victoria were more likely than the rest of Australia to, wear a facemask (99 per cent compared with 44 per cent), keep physical distance from people (97 per cent compared with 91 per cent), and avoid large social gatherings (96 per cent compared with 77 per cent). However, they were less likely to shop in physical retail stores (45 per cent compared with 81 per cent), attend their workplace in person (30 per cent compared to 66 per cent), send children to school or child care (18 per cent compared with 74 per cent), or dine in at restaurants or cafés (2 per cent compared with 50 per cent),” she said.