在COVID-19大流行限制之前、期间和之后,有复杂需求的儿童/青少年家庭。

IF 1.7 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES
Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma Pub Date : 2025-01-03 eCollection Date: 2025-06-01 DOI:10.1007/s40653-024-00676-9
Kim Arbeau, Serena Atallah, Jeff St Pierre
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,有复杂特殊需求儿童的家庭面临许多障碍,可用资源较少。很少有发表的研究描述了临床样本中封城后的家庭功能。目前的研究调查了加拿大三个有儿童/青少年的家庭样本的护理人员福祉、家庭功能和儿童/青少年症状学,这些儿童/青少年在大流行前(2020年3月之前一年内的门诊就诊)、COVID大流行(社会封锁期间一年内的门诊就诊)和限制后(2022年夏季至2023年夏季之间的门诊就诊)存在预先存在的、复杂的、情感的、行为的、发育的和心理健康需求。横断面档案数据(每个队列中有300个)与家庭在三级儿童服务机构作为标准护理完成的评估进行比较。正如预测的那样,与大流行前的样本相比,大流行摄入样本报告了更多的父母心理健康挑战、压力、冲突,并减少了娱乐郊游。虽然限制后样本中的父母压力水平和家庭外出率与大流行前的样本相似,但封锁后的父母心理健康症状、家庭冲突和家庭喘息水平表明,家庭仍在恢复中。所有三个样本的儿童症状水平都很高,可能是该三级精神卫生机构的摄入标准的结果。提出了研究建议。临床机构应注意,一些有复杂需求的儿童家庭可能仍会受到COVID-19大流行变化的影响,并考虑采用以家庭为导向、了解创伤的护理方法来评估大流行的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Families of Children/Youth with Complex Needs Before, During, and After COVID-19 Pandemic Restrictions.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, families with children who had complex special needs faced many obstacles and had less resources available to them. Little published research has described post-lockdown family functioning in clinical samples. The current study investigated caregiver well-being, family functioning, and child/youth symptomatology in three Canadian samples of families with children/youth who had pre-existing, complex, emotional, behavioural, developmental, and mental health needs pre-pandemic (clinic intake within 1 year prior to March 2020), COVID pandemic (clinic intake 1 year during societal lockdowns), and post-restrictions (clinic intake between summer 2022 and summer 2023). Cross-sectional archival data (n > 300 in each cohort) were compared from assessments completed by families as standard of care at a tertiary children's service agency. As predicted, the pandemic intake sample reported significantly more parental mental health challenges, stress, conflicts, and went on fewer recreational outings than the pre-pandemic sample. While parent stress levels and family outing rates in the post-restriction sample resembled the pre-pandemic sample, post-lockdown parental mental health symptoms, family conflict, and family respite levels indicate that families are still recovering. Child symptom levels were high in all three samples, likely a result of intake criteria at this tertiary mental health agency. Research recommendations are offered. Clinical agencies should be mindful that some families of children with complex needs may still be impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic changes and consider using a family oriented, trauma-informed care approach to assess the effect of the pandemic.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
6.70%
发文量
71
期刊介绍: Underpinned by a biopsychosocial approach, the Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma presents original research and prevention and treatment strategies for understanding and dealing with symptoms and disorders related to the psychological effects of trauma experienced by children and adolescents during childhood and where the impact of these experiences continues into adulthood. The journal also examines intervention models directed toward the individual, family, and community, new theoretical models and approaches, and public policy proposals and innovations. In addition, the journal promotes rigorous investigation and debate on the human capacity for agency, resilience and longer-term healing in the face of child and adolescent trauma. With a multidisciplinary approach that draws input from the psychological, medical, social work, sociological, public health, legal and education fields, the journal features research, intervention approaches and evidence-based programs, theoretical articles, specific review articles, brief reports and case studies, and commentaries on current and/or controversial topics. The journal also encourages submissions from less heard voices, for example in terms of geography, minority status or service user perspectives. Among the topics examined in the Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma: The effects of childhood maltreatment Loss, natural disasters, and political conflict Exposure to or victimization from family or community violence Racial, ethnic, gender, sexual orientation or class discrimination Physical injury, diseases, and painful or debilitating medical treatments The impact of poverty, social deprivation and inequality Barriers and facilitators on pathways to recovery The Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma is an important resource for practitioners, policymakers, researchers, and academics whose work is centered on children exposed to traumatic events and adults exposed to traumatic events as children.
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