Care to share some links? I did some quick Googling about SARS back in Spring but couldn’t find anything that didn’t look to me like clickbait and scare-mongering. But I only scratched the surface, so it’s quite likely that I have missed quality information.
Among the 181 individuals who participated in clinical interviews at follow-up, 6 (3.3%) had a history of psychiatric disorders before contracting SARS. At the time of follow-up, a total of 77 (42.5%) had experienced at least 1 active psychiatric illness as determined by the SCID. The most common diagnoses were posttraumatic stress disorder (42 of 77 survivors [54.5%]), depression (30 of 77 [39.0%]), somatoform pain disorder (28 of 77 [36.4%]), panic disorder (25 of 77 [32.5%]), and obsessive compulsive disorder (12 of 77 [15.6%]).
[...]
Chronic fatigue was found to be common among both psychiatric and nonpsychiatric groups. The prevalence rate according to the Chalder fatigue questionnaires (chronic fatigue score ≥4 and symptoms lasting for >6 months) and the modified CDC 1994 criteria15 for CFS were 40.3% and 27.1%, respectively. Those with fatigue symptoms were more likely to have comorbid active psychiatric disorders (Table 3).
Care to share some links? I did some quick Googling about SARS back in Spring but couldn’t find anything that didn’t look to me like clickbait and scare-mongering. But I only scratched the surface, so it’s quite likely that I have missed quality information.
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/415378
https://bmcneurol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/1471-2377-11-37
Both are scientific papers published years after SARS and before our present issues with COVID-19