Parental mental health trajectories over the COVID-19 pandemic and links with childhood adversity and pandemic stress

IF 3.4 2区 心理学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES
Dylan Johnson , Dillon T. Browne , Heather Prime , Jon Heron , Mark Wade
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic has created significant disruptions, with parents of school-age children being identified as a vulnerable population. Limited research has longitudinally tracked the mental health trajectories of parents over the active pandemic period. In addition, parents' history of adverse (ACEs) and benevolent (BCEs) childhood experiences may compound or attenuate the effect of COVID-19 stressors on parental psychopathology.

Objective

To identify distinct longitudinal trajectories of parental mental health over the COVID-19 pandemic and how these trajectories are associated with parental ACEs, BCEs, and COVID-19 stress.

Participants and setting

547 parents of 5–18-year-old children from the U.K., U.S., Canada, and Australia.

Methods

Growth mixture modelling was used to identify trajectories of parental mental health (distress, anxiety, post-traumatic stress, and substance use) from May 2020 to October 2021. COVID-19 stress, ACEs, and BCEs were assessed as predictors of mental health trajectories via multinomial logistic regression.

Results

Two-class trajectories of “Low Stable” and “Moderate Stable” symptoms were identified for psychological distress and anxiety. Three-class trajectories of “Low Stable”, “High Stable”, and “High Decreasing” symptoms were observed for post-traumatic stress. Reliable trajectories for substance use could not be identified. Multinomial logistic regression showed that COVID-19 stress and ACEs independently predicted membership in trajectories of greater mental health impairment, while BCEs independently predicted membership in trajectories of lower psychological distress.

Conclusions

Parents experienced mostly stable mental health symptomatology, with trajectories varying by overall symptom severity. COVID-19 stress, ACEs, and BCEs each appear to play a role in parents' mental health during this unique historical period.
COVID-19大流行期间父母心理健康轨迹及其与童年逆境和大流行压力的联系
背景:2019冠状病毒病大流行造成了严重破坏,学龄儿童的父母被确定为弱势群体。有限的研究对大流行活跃时期父母的心理健康轨迹进行了纵向追踪。此外,父母的不良(ace)和善意(bce)童年经历史可能会加剧或减弱COVID-19应激源对父母精神病理的影响。目的:确定COVID-19大流行期间父母心理健康的不同纵向轨迹,以及这些轨迹与父母ace、bce和COVID-19压力之间的关系。参与者和环境:来自英国、美国、加拿大和澳大利亚的547名5-18岁儿童的父母。方法:使用生长混合模型确定2020年5月至2021年10月期间父母心理健康(痛苦、焦虑、创伤后应激和物质使用)的轨迹。通过多项逻辑回归评估COVID-19压力、ace和bce作为心理健康轨迹的预测因子。结果:心理困扰和焦虑存在“低稳定”和“中等稳定”两类症状轨迹。在创伤后应激症状中观察到“低稳定”、“高稳定”和“高下降”的三级轨迹。无法确定药物使用的可靠轨迹。多项逻辑回归显示,新冠肺炎应激和ace独立预测重度心理健康损害轨迹,而bce独立预测轻度心理困扰轨迹。结论:父母经历了大部分稳定的心理健康症状,其轨迹随整体症状严重程度而变化。在这一独特的历史时期,COVID-19压力、ace和bce似乎都在父母的心理健康中发挥了作用。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.40
自引率
10.40%
发文量
397
期刊介绍: Official Publication of the International Society for Prevention of Child Abuse and Neglect. Child Abuse & Neglect The International Journal, provides an international, multidisciplinary forum on all aspects of child abuse and neglect, with special emphasis on prevention and treatment; the scope extends further to all those aspects of life which either favor or hinder child development. While contributions will primarily be from the fields of psychology, psychiatry, social work, medicine, nursing, law enforcement, legislature, education, and anthropology, the Journal encourages the concerned lay individual and child-oriented advocate organizations to contribute.
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