COVID-19大流行与有虐待儿童史的青少年人际关系之间的关系

Frontiers in child and adolescent psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-11-29 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/frcha.2024.1434496
Julie-Anne McCarthy, Ana M Osorio, Tamara L Taillieu, Ashley Stewart-Tufescu, Tracie O Afifi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

导言:2019冠状病毒病大流行对青年的健康和福祉产生了重大影响。先前遭受不公平待遇的青年,例如遭受儿童虐待的青年,可能比同龄人经历更大的社会心理挑战和长期困难,包括持续的人际关系问题。鉴于青春期和成年早期健康关系的重要性、大流行病对青年的重大影响以及有虐待儿童史的青年可能面临的不成比例的挑战,本研究的目的是从青年本身的角度更好地了解有和没有虐待儿童史的青年之间关系冲突的变化。具体而言,目的是研究在2019冠状病毒病大流行的前三年,青少年虐待史是否与报告与(a)父母、(b)兄弟姐妹或(c)亲密伴侣冲突增加的可能性增加有关。方法:数据来源于幸福感与体验(WE)研究;这是一项对加拿大马尼托巴省1000名青年/父母夫妇的纵向和代际队列研究,始于2017年。2017年至2022年,WE研究数据每年通过自我报告的青年调查收集,共收集了5波数据,第3波(2020年)、第4波(2021年)和第5波(2022年)包括COVID-19问题(n = 586, 56.43%女性,第5波18至21岁)。计算多项回归模型,以检查青少年的儿童虐待史是否与2020年与父母、兄弟姐妹和亲密伴侣的冲突增加、减少或保持一致。与大流行前的水平相比,是2021年和2022年。结果:结果表明,与没有虐待儿童史的青少年相比,有虐待儿童史的青少年在大流行的头三年更有可能报告所有三种类型关系中的冲突增加。讨论:研究结果有助于我们理解COVID-19大流行与有儿童虐待史的青年与没有儿童虐待史的同龄人之间的人际关系之间的关系,表明有虐待史的青年和家庭可能面临的长期挑战或不公平现象,并可能为COVID-19后时期以及未来的全球紧急情况的政策、规划、干预和恢复工作提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The association between the COVID-19 pandemic and interpersonal relationships among youth with a child maltreatment history.

Introduction: The COVID-19 pandemic had significant impacts on youth health and well-being. Youth with prior inequities, such as those exposed to child maltreatment, may have experienced greater psychosocial challenges and long-term difficulties than their peers, including sustained interpersonal relationships problems. Given the importance of healthy relationships during adolescence and early adulthood, the significant impact the pandemic had on youth, and the potential disproportionate challenges for youth with a child maltreatment history, the purpose of the present study was to better understand changes in relational conflict among youth with and without a child maltreatment history from the perspectives of youth themselves. Specifically, the aims were to examine if youth child maltreatment history was associated with an increased likelihood of reporting increased conflict with (a) parents, (b) siblings, or (c) intimate partners during the first three years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Methods: Data were drawn from the Well-Being and Experiences (WE) Study; a longitudinal and intergenerational cohort study of 1,000 youth/parent dyads in Manitoba, Canada that began in 2017. WE study data were collected annually via self-reported youth surveys between 2017 and 2022 for a total of 5 waves of data collection, and COVID-19 questions were included in Waves 3 (2020), 4 (2021) and 5 (2022) (n = 586, 56.43% female, ages 18 to 21 at Wave 5). Multinomial regressions models were computed to examine whether a youth's child maltreatment history was associated with increased, decreased, or consistent levels of conflict with parents, siblings, and intimate partners in 2020, 2021, and 2022 compared to pre-pandemic levels.

Results: Results indicated that compared to youth with no child maltreatment history, youth with a child maltreatment history were more likely to report increased conflict across all three types of relationships during first three years of the pandemic.

Discussion: Findings contribute to our understanding of the association between the COVID-19 pandemic and interpersonal relationships among youth who have a child maltreatment history compared to their peers without child maltreatment histories, signal potential long-term challenges or inequities for youth and families with a history of maltreatment, and may inform policy, programming, intervention, and recovery efforts in the post-COVID-19 period, and for future global emergencies.

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