Children's Mental Health in Southwestern Ontario during Summer 2020 of the COVID-19 Pandemic.

IF 2.3 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Alexandra Mactavish, Carli Mastronardi, Rosanne Menna, Kimberley A Babb, Marco Battaglia, Ananda B Amstadter, Lance M Rappaport
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Abstract

Objective: COVID-19 presents an unprecedented global crisis. Research is critically needed to identify the impact of the pandemic on children's mental health including psychosocial factors that predict resilience, recovery, and persistent distress. The present study collected data in June-July 2020 to describe children's mental health during the initial phase of the pandemic, including the magnitude and nature of psychiatric and psychological distress in children, and to evaluate social support as a putative psychosocial moderator of children's increased distress.

Method: Children and parents from 190 families of children aged 8 to 13 from the Windsor-Essex region of Southwestern Ontario reported (i) retrospectively on children's well-being (e.g., worry, happiness) immediately prior to the pandemic and (ii) on children's current well-being; irritability; social support; and anxiety, depressive, and posttraumatic stress symptoms at the baseline assessment of an ongoing longitudinal study of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Results: Children and parents reported worsened well-being and psychological distress during the pandemic compared to retrospective report of pre-pandemic well-being. Child-perceived social support from family and friends was associated with lower symptom severity and attenuated increase in psychological distress.

Conclusions: Study findings suggest possible broad psychological impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic and are consistent with prior research that indicates a protective role of social support to mitigate the negative psychological impact of the pandemic. These findings may inform clinical assessments and highlight the need for public resources to safeguard children's mental health.

Abstract Image

2020年夏季2019冠状病毒病大流行期间安大略省西南部儿童的心理健康
目的:新冠肺炎疫情是一场前所未有的全球危机。迫切需要进行研究,以确定大流行对儿童心理健康的影响,包括预测其复原力、恢复和持续痛苦的社会心理因素。本研究收集了2020年6月至7月的数据,以描述大流行初期儿童的心理健康状况,包括儿童精神和心理困扰的程度和性质,并评估社会支持作为儿童痛苦加剧的假定心理社会调节因素。方法:来自安大略省西南部温莎-埃塞克斯地区190个8至13岁儿童家庭的儿童和家长(i)在大流行之前立即回顾性报告了儿童的福祉(例如,担忧,快乐)和(ii)儿童目前的福祉;易怒的;社会支持;以及正在进行的COVID-19大流行纵向研究基线评估中的焦虑、抑郁和创伤后应激症状。结果:与大流行前幸福感的回顾性报告相比,儿童和家长报告的幸福感和心理困扰在大流行期间恶化。儿童感知到的来自家庭和朋友的社会支持与较低的症状严重程度和减轻的心理困扰增加有关。结论:研究结果表明,COVID-19大流行可能产生广泛的心理影响,并与先前的研究一致,表明社会支持在减轻大流行的负面心理影响方面具有保护作用。这些发现可能为临床评估提供信息,并强调需要公共资源来保护儿童的心理健康。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.30%
发文量
35
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