Skip navigation
Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust logo Newcastle Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust logo
  • Contact
  • News
  • Commercial
  • Private healthcare
  • Careers
  • Donate
Use this link to enable the ReciteMe accessibility toolkit Enable ReciteMe accessibility tools
Use this link to enable the ReciteMe accessibility toolkit

Accessibility tools

Enable ReciteMe accessibility tools
  • Home
  • Hospitals and locations

    Hospitals

    • Royal Victoria Infirmary
    • Great North Children’s Hospital
    • Freeman Hospital
    • Our other locations

    Directions to the Royal Victoria Infirmary

  • Patients and visitors

    Patients and visitors

    • Getting to hospital
    • Your stay in hospital
    • Rearrange or cancel appointments
    • Your outpatient appointment
    • Visiting
    • Do you still need to see us?
    • Accessibility and disability support
    • Video appointments
    • Planning for discharge together
    • Privacy and dignity
    • Support for carers
    • Bereavement support
    • Chaplaincy service
    • We welcome your feedback
    • Breastfeeding in our hospitals
    • Access to medical records
    • Overseas visitors
    • Secure online payments
  • Services

    Services

    Select from the list below to jump to Services that begin with that letter.

    A
    B
    C
    D
    E
    F
    G
    H
    I
    J
    K
    L
    M
    N
    O
    P
    Q
    R
    S
    T
    U
    V
    W
    X
    Y
    Z
    View all Services
  • Staff

    Staff

    • Consultants
    • Nurse Consultants
  • Home
  • Hospitals and locations
  • Patients and visitors
  • Consultants
  • Contact
  • News
  • Commercial
  • Private healthcare
  • Careers
  • Donate
Home > Services > Newcastle Occupational Health Service (OHS) > Occupational health information for staff > COVID support materials > Low mood during COVID-19

Low mood during COVID-19

On this page

  1. What is low mood?
  2. Symptoms can include
  3. Lack of routine
  4. How does COVID-19 lead to low mood?

What is low mood?

Everyone feels sad or low at times. Although this is common after particularly distressing events, sometimes there is no obvious reason why we are feeling down.

Low mood often improves after a few days or weeks. However, if you feel like this for a longer period of time, it can be helpful to talk to your GP to find out what options are available to you for support.

If you start to have thoughts around suicide or self-harm, it is important to tell someone. Please know that support is available, even if services seem busy at the moment.

You can contact the Samaritans or NHS 111. If you are worried that you cannot keep yourself safe, seek urgent support straight away by calling the emergency services on 999, your local mental health Crisis Team, or go to your nearest A&E department.

Important advice:

Symptoms can include

Symptoms of low mood vary from person to person. You may experience one or several of the following:

  • Lack of attention to your appearance
  • Feeling sad a lot of the time
  • Crying more than usual
  • Feeling anxious / low self-esteem
  • Tiredness / poor sleep
  • Feeling irritable / frustrated / angry
  • Lack of interest in activities that you used to enjoy
  • Low motivation
  • Low sex drive
  • Change in appetite

Lack of routine

The pandemic has changed our typical daily lives, and some people may have struggled to maintain a sense of routine.

This can lead to adopting unhealthy habits as ways of coping in the short-term, such as consuming more alcohol or maybe using drugs.

Some people’s diets, physical activity levels or sleeping patterns may also have changed. All of these things can contribute to lower mood

How does COVID-19 lead to low mood?

Isolation

Isolation may have stopped some people from being able to do the usual activities that they enjoy. Some are likely to have missed out on important life events, whereas others may have lacked close contact with friends, family, and colleagues. Feeling cut-off from our normal lives can cause us to feel lonely which can contribute to low mood.

Loss

During the pandemic, people may have experienced loss in some way. This could have been loss of a loved one, a relationship or a job.

Experiencing loss is a major life-event and can be difficult to deal with. It is not uncommon to feel down or upset afterwards and it can take time to get back to feeling ‘normal’.

Uncertainty

The uncertainty of the pandemic may have caused some people to feel worried about how COVID-19 could affect them and their loved ones.

This is understandable, however excessive worrying can be unhelpful, and can lead to us feeling anxious or distressed.

Page last updated: 03/11/2025

Share this page on

  • Twitter logo
  • Facebook logo
  • Email icon

In this section

  • Post COVID-19 recovery guide
  • Managing low mood during COVID-19
  • Managing COVID-19 vaccine anxiety
  • Managing brain fog after COVID-19
  • Low mood during COVID-19
  • Fatigue Management
  • Brain fog after COVID-19
  • Tips to manage fatigue after COVID-19
  • Occupational burnout
  • Anxiety around COVID-19
  • Managing anxiety around COVID-19

Follow us on social media for all the latest news and announcements

  • Find us on Facebook
  • Find us on Twitter
  • Find us on Instagram
  • Find us on LinkedIn
  • Find us on YouTube

Services

For service details please visit the relevant service page.

Charity

For charity details please visit the Charity site.

Hospitals

For hospital details please visit the relevant location.

Careers

For our current job vacancies, please visit the careers section.

  • Contact
  • Information leaflets and helpful resources
  • Freedom of Information
  • Press and media
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Terms and conditions

Copyright © 2025 Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust.

Lovingly crafted by Mixd

Manage Cookie Consent
This website uses a combination of essential and non-essential cookies to improve your on-site experience.
Functional Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes. The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.
  • Manage options
  • Manage services
  • Manage {vendor_count} vendors
  • Read more about these purposes
View preferences
  • {title}
  • {title}
  • {title}