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After exiting my sleeping quarters, three steps lead me to the sanitary room which is only a few steps wide itself. I have my privacy there but, as soon as I leave it and join my fellow teammates at the breakfast table, I won’t be alone for hours. In the small, restricted confines of our habitat we eat, sleep, carry out experiments, do our fitness routine and our daily housekeeping chores. After one week in isolation, my mood starts taking a slight downturn. As much as I like my teammates – we were tested extensively and chosen for compatibility after all – I miss my family, open spaces, just being alone by myself!
If I want to talk to my loved ones, I have to use online tools and my time and bandwidth is restricted.
Does this ring a bell?
Up until recently, this scenario was only familiar to a limited number of people working or living in remote places, on ships or research stations as well as astronauts and people in medical quarantine. Being an analog astronaut myself, it’s a situation I expect to find myself in soon during the Austrian Space Forum’s next analog mission AMADEE20 in the Negev desert in Israel in autumn of 2020. We train and prepare for this kind of isolation months in advance, yet we still feel the psychological and physical effects.
The new Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 changed all that, in the blink of an eye. Millions of people worldwide have been cast in isolation from one day to the next, with no clear end in sight.
Researchers have done and are still doing extensive work on the medical and psychological effects of isolation on the human mind, body as well as on groups of people. One goal of this research is to prepare humans for long-time space travel. The unprecedented situation we find ourselves in warrants the question:
What can we learn from this research to help with the current crisis?
A study by researchers at the University of Southern California and University of British Columbia, Vancouver, found that 5% of the people who went into long-time isolation with zero psychological disorders came out of it exhibiting at least one psychological disorder. This may seem like a small number, but it isn’t. People in isolation face several emotional challenges, as most of you might be able to attest. There’s the feeling of impotence and of being at the mercy of a higher power.
Being cooped up in small spaces, seeing the same people day after day, little exercise, having little time and room to yourself, monotony and boredom or stress at the other end of the spectrum (try home-office with three kids!), sensory deprivation and maybe even rationing can lead to a number of problems. Sleep disturbance and impaired cognition up to a subclinical depressive mood can set in after some days already. They have a negative effect on interpersonal relationships and conflicts can break out between family members and flatmates (looking at you, my dear husband).
While of course tolerance, cooperation and patience are useful traits to cope with these problems, here are some concrete tips on how to stay healthy, active, sane and in my case married.
For shared living spaces, psychologists recommend identifying certain areas as private, such as the desk or entire rooms. These should be a retreat for some alone-time compared to places shared by everyone, such as the kitchen or bathroom. Communication among all involved is crucial for this. Everyone should identify their needs. Ideas for implementing those wishes should be thought up together. One possible solution could be a timetable that shows who gets to use which room at what time. In any case, a change of perspective also helps. Because we feel controlled from the outside by quarantine requirements or restrictions and severely restricted in our autonomy, it is important to find freedom in small ways.
You could take up old hobbies that are fun and doable inside or even try out new ones. A regular daily routine helps to stay active but, at the same time, you should try to add flavour by mixing things up (have you ever wondered about astronauts playing with their food or posing in silly costumes?). It’s about perceiving more than the limitations by thinking about ways in which we can actively shape our lives. Looking to the future after the Coronavirus crisis such as looking up all the places you are going to visit may also help.
Think about this: most people have been in fact wishing for fewer things on their to-do list and more time with their family!
We’ve got just that right now. It’s not about “careful what you wish for”, it’s a chance to use this time as a gift and play games with your kids, catch up on things you didn’t have time for in the hurly-burly of your daily routine and reflect on the important things in life. Maybe there are things that you would like to change permanently after the crisis?
Even though I’m a microbiologist by training I find it amazing how such a microscopic thing can affect the whole world!
One of my other hats is public health professional. I’m a PhD-student in Public Health with eight years of experience as a team leader in infectious diseases control at a local public health department in Germany. My main subject of study is health literacy, which means the organisational and individual competence to access, understand, appraise and apply health-related information in order to make healthy decisions. You can imagine how in these trying times this competence is more crucial than ever.
I’ll tell you more about this and provide some insight in a follow-up article, stay tuned!
Illustration: NASA-Langley.
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Jamy-Lee Bam, Data Scientist, Cape Town
Paarmita Pandey, Physics Masters student, India
Nesibe Feyza Dogan, Highschool student, Netherlands
Una, writer and educator
Radu Toma, Romania
Financier and CEO, USA
Yara, Lebanon
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