COVID-19-Related Changes in Adolescents' Daily-Life Social Interactions and Psychopathology Symptoms.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q3 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease Pub Date : 2025-04-01 Epub Date: 2025-04-09 DOI:10.1097/NMD.0000000000001826
Robin Achterhof, Inez Myin-Germeys, Eva Bamps, Noëmi Hagemann, Karlijn S F M Hermans, Anu P Hiekkaranta, Julie J Janssens, Aleksandra Lecei, Ginette Lafit, Olivia J Kirtley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic is believed to have strongly impacted adolescents' mental health through limiting their day-to-day social lives. However, little is known about the role of (social) risk/protective factors and adolescent mental health. Subclinical psychopathology, and risk and protective factors of n = 173 adolescents (T1 mean age = 16.0; 89% girls) were assessed prepandemic and early-pandemic (T1: 2018/2019; T2: May 2020). Daily-life social interactions were assessed in 6-day experience sampling periods. Correcting for age, multilevel analyses revealed declines in general psychopathology and anxiety symptoms; fewer face-to-face social interactions, more online social interactions; and higher-quality face-to-face interactions during the pandemic than before. Negative associations between psychopathology and the quality of face-to-face peer and family interactions were stronger during the pandemic than prepandemic. The results reflect that, early in the pandemic, the mental health impact on adolescents may have been limited. High-quality face-to-face interactions with family and peers seemed particularly powerful in keeping adolescents resilient.

与新冠肺炎相关的青少年日常生活社交互动和精神病理症状的变化
摘要:新冠肺炎大流行被认为通过限制青少年的日常社交生活,严重影响了青少年的心理健康。然而,人们对(社会)风险/保护因素与青少年心理健康的作用知之甚少。173名青少年(T1平均年龄= 16.0;对大流行前和大流行早期(T1: 2018/2019;T2: 2020年5月)。日常生活中的社会互动在6天的经验采样期进行评估。校正年龄因素后,多水平分析显示,一般精神病理和焦虑症状有所下降;面对面的社交活动减少,网上社交活动增多;大流行期间面对面交流的质量也比以前更高。在大流行期间,精神病理学与面对面同伴和家庭互动质量之间的负相关比大流行前更强。结果表明,在流行病早期,青少年的心理健康影响可能有限。与家人和同龄人的高质量面对面互动似乎对保持青少年的适应力特别有效。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
5.30%
发文量
233
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease publishes peer-reviewed articles containing new data or ways of reorganizing established knowledge relevant to understanding and modifying human behavior, especially that defined as impaired or diseased, and the context, applications and effects of that knowledge. Our policy is summarized by the slogan, "Behavioral science for clinical practice." We consider articles that include at least one behavioral variable, clear definition of study populations, and replicable research designs. Authors should use the active voice and first person whenever possible.
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