Changes in UK pre-schooler's mental health symptoms over the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic: Data from Co-SPYCE study

JCPP advances Pub Date : 2023-04-15 DOI:10.1002/jcv2.12163
Peter J. Lawrence, Simona Skripkauskaite, Adrienne Shum, Polly Waite, Helen Dodd
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Abstract

Background

The COVID-19 pandemic caused significant disruption to the lives of children and their families. Pre-school children may have been particularly vulnerable to the effects of the pandemic, with the closure of childcare facilities, playgrounds, playcentres and parent and toddler groups limiting their opportunities for social interaction at a crucial stage of development. Additionally, for parents working from home, caring for pre-school aged children who require high levels of support and care, was likely challenging. We conducted an intensive longitudinal, but not nationally representative, study to examine trajectories of pre-schoolers’ mental symptoms in the United Kingdom during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods

UK-based parents and carers (n = 1520) of pre-school-aged children (2–4 years) completed monthly online surveys about their pre-schoolers’ mental health between April 2020 and March 2021. The survey examined changes in children's emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention.

Results

In our final mixed-effects models, our predictors (fixed effects) accounted for 5% of the variance in each of conduct problems, emotional symptoms and hyperactivity/inattention symptoms scores, and the combined random and fixed effects accounted for between 64% and 73% of the variance. Pre-schoolers’ emotional problems and hyperactivity/inattention symptoms declined from April through summer 2020 and then increased again during the autumn and winter 2020/2021 as lockdowns were re-introduced. Pre-schoolers who attended childcare showed greater decline in symptom severity than those who did not. Older children, compared to younger, showed greater lability of emotion symptom severity. Attending childcare predicted lower symptom severity across all three domains of conduct problems, emotional symptoms, and hyperactivity/inattention, while the opposite pattern was observed for children whose parent had a mental health problem.

Conclusions

Our findings reinforce the importance of examining pre-schoolers’ mental health in the context of micro and macro-level factors. Interventions focussing on family factors such as parent mental health, as well as continued provision of childcare, may have most potential to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on young children's mental health.

Abstract Image

新冠肺炎大流行第一年英国学龄前儿童心理健康症状的变化:来自Co-SPYCE研究的数据。
背景:新冠肺炎大流行对儿童及其家庭的生活造成了重大干扰。学龄前儿童可能特别容易受到疫情的影响,儿童保育设施、游乐场、游戏中心以及家长和幼儿群体的关闭限制了他们在关键发展阶段的社交机会。此外,对于在家工作的父母来说,照顾需要高水平支持和照顾的学龄前儿童可能是一项挑战。我们进行了一项密集的纵向研究,但没有全国代表性,以检查新冠肺炎大流行第一年英国学龄前儿童的心理症状轨迹。方法:在2020年4月至2021年3月期间,英国学龄前儿童(2-4岁)的父母和看护人(n=1520)每月完成一次关于学龄前儿童心理健康的在线调查。这项调查调查了儿童情绪症状、行为问题和多动/注意力不集中的变化。结果:在我们最终的混合效应模型中,我们的预测因素(固定效应)占行为问题、情绪症状和多动/注意力不集中症状评分的5%,随机和固定效应的组合占64%至73%的方差。2020年4月至夏季,学龄前儿童的情绪问题和多动/注意力不集中症状有所下降,但在2020/2021秋冬期间,随着封锁措施的重新实施,症状再次增加。参加儿童保育的学龄前儿童的症状严重程度比没有参加的儿童下降得更大。与年龄较小的儿童相比,年龄较大的儿童表现出更大的情绪不稳定症状严重程度。照顾孩子可以预测行为问题、情绪症状和多动/注意力不集中这三个领域的症状严重程度较低,而父母有心理健康问题的儿童则相反。结论:我们的研究结果强化了从微观和宏观层面因素来检查学龄前儿童心理健康的重要性。关注父母心理健康等家庭因素的干预措施,以及继续提供儿童保育服务,可能最有可能减轻新冠肺炎对幼儿心理健康的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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