3.1.2. Reported Changes in Everyday Life

Half of the participants are at least partly more often alone (52.9%) and have more time for themselves than before the lockdown (60.1%); 52.4% can at least partly not pursue their hobbies and 68.8% find the current restrictions somewhat decelerating. The family life and the professional life has at least partly become more stressful for 51% and 48.6% of the participants, respectively, and 51.9% report having more to do now than before the lockdown. Nonetheless, half of the participants report only slightly missing social contacts or having less contact with people who are important to them (51.9% and 56.6%, respectively; Table 4).


**Table 4.** Reported changes in everyday life.

3.1.3. Reported Worries during the Lockdown

Worries due to the COVID-19 pandemic are overall small to moderate with a median of 2 and an interquartile range (IQR) of 1–3 on the 5-point Likert scale (see Supplementary Materials). Most (89.6%) of the participants do not or only partly have existential fear. A similar percentage (83.3%) is seen for financial worries ("I am afraid of financial losses"). The fear of professional changes is low: 75.2% are not or only partly afraid of professional changes. Most of the participants do not or only partly worry about the personal future (77.4%) and about uncertainties about the future (72.7%). Worries about restrictions are rare in our sample with 80.7% ("I am afraid of further restrictions") and 84.4% ("The restrictions of public life seem threatening"). Most (80.9%) of the participants are not or only partly afraid of falling ill themselves, but 82.9% are at least partly afraid that a relative or acquaintance will become infected with COVID-19, representing the most prominent worry (Table 5).


**Table 5.** Reported worries during the lockdown.
