Use the Advanced search box. Type your search using carefully selected Boolean operators as described in the Search Tips tab of the Omni Guide.
Build your Subject search by choosing Subject in the drop down menu on each line.
anxiety OR stress OR depression OR "mental health"
AND
covid* OR corona OR pandemic
AND Canad*
Click "Search" to find 118 articles.
Expand "Refine Your Search" to select "Peer Reviewed Journals" and Click "Apply Filters".
Search results in 80 articles from "Peer Reviewed Journals". Select the article(s) of interest. Confirm the articles are from peer reviewed journals by reviewing the Peer Review Checks on the right side of this page and/or confirming in Ulrichsweb.

Some scholarly journals are peer-reviewed or refereed, meaning that articles submitted for publication must be approved by a panel of reviewers who are considered experts in their fields. Because they are highly selective, peer-reviewed journals are often regarded as the best in their field.
Not all journals go through the peer-review process. To determine whether your journal article is peer-reviewed or refereed, you must first find out if the overall journal that the article is published in is peer-reviewed or refereed. The following are several suggestions for determining if a journal is peer-reviewed/refereed or not:
3A. Type Ulrichsweb into OMNI's search box and click Search:

3B. Locate Ulrich's on your list of results. Click on the Available Online link:

3C. Click again on the full text link:

3D. In Ulrich's, look up your journal. Type the journal title into the search box and press enter, or click on the green magnifying glass icon
to search:

3E. From your results, look at the columns next to the journal you were looking for. If a "Refereed" (referee shirt) icon appears in column 2 it shows that the journal is peer-reviewed:

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NOTE: Even if a journal is peer-reviewed, an individual article in that journal may not be. Some article types (i.e. news items, editorials, letters, book or article reviews, etc.) may not have gone through the peer-review process. When in doubt, check with a librarian, or ask your professor or TA. |
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To find editorial policies (including whether articles are peer-reviewed), go to the journal's homepage. In this example, the Canadian Journal of Communication website, indicates there is a peer review process.

And in more detail, here is what the journal is evaluating potential articles on: