正在进行的COVID-19封锁与澳大利亚家庭的财务和心理健康经历之间的联系

IF 2 2区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL ISSUES
Anna M. H. Price, Diana Contreras-Suárez, Anna Zhu, Natalie Schreurs, Mary-Anne Measey, Sue Woolfenden, Jade Burley, Hannah Bryson, Daryl Efron, Anthea Rhodes, Sharon Goldfeld
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引用次数: 1

摘要

2020年,澳大利亚成功实施了COVID-19公共卫生限制措施,包括仅对维多利亚州大都会居民实施全国“初步封锁”(3月至5月)和“持续封锁”(7月至11月)。我们评估了持续的封锁与家庭财务和心理健康之间的关系。在2020年6月和9月的皇家儿童医院全国儿童健康调查中,维多利亚州和新南威尔士州(NSW)的儿童照顾者报告了以下情况:工作/收入损失;物质匮乏(无力支付必需品);收入贫困;心理健康(Kessler-6);对照顾者/儿童心理健康的感知影响;照顾者/孩子的应对。6月/9月护理人员的数据(N = 1207/902)使用差异中差异模型进行分析(NSW提供比较物)。在维多利亚州持续封锁期间,工作/收入损失增加了11%(95%置信区间:3%-18%);Kessler-6心理健康状况不佳的比例为6% (95%CI: - 0.3%-12%),对看护者的负面心理健康影响为14% (95%CI: 6% - 23%),对儿童的负面心理健康影响为12% (95%CI: 4%-20%)。女性(相对于男性)照顾者、大都市(相对于地区/农村)家庭和有小学学龄儿童的家庭(相对于学前/高中)受到的影响最大。持续的封锁与心理健康、就业和收入方面的负面经历有关,但与剥夺或贫困无关,这可能是因为政府在大流行早期引入了收入补充措施。未来的封锁需要有计划地应对疫情,并提供基于证据的财政和精神卫生支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Associations between ongoing COVID-19 lockdown and the financial and mental health experiences of Australian families

Associations between ongoing COVID-19 lockdown and the financial and mental health experiences of Australian families

In 2020, Australia's successful COVID-19 public health restrictions comprised a national “initial lockdown” (March–May) and “ongoing lockdown” (July–November) for metropolitan Victorian residents only. We evaluated associations between ongoing lockdown and family finances and mental health. In the June and September 2020 Royal Children's Hospital National Child Health Polls, caregivers of children in Victoria and New South Wales (NSW) reported the following: job/income loss; material deprivation (inability to pay for essential items); income poverty; mental health (Kessler-6); perceived impact on caregiver/child mental health; and caregiver/child coping. Data from caregivers (N = 1207/902) in June/September were analysed using difference-in-difference modelling (NSW provided the comparator). During Victoria's ongoing lockdown, job/income loss increased by 11% (95%CI: 3%–18%); Kessler-6 poor mental health by 6% (95%CI: −0.3%–12%) and perceived negative mental health impacts by 14% for caregivers (95%CI: 6%–23%) and 12% for children (95%CI: 4%–20%). Female (vs. male) caregivers, metropolitan (vs. regional/rural) families, and families with elementary school-aged children (vs. pre-/high-school) were the most affected. The ongoing lockdown was associated with negative experiences of mental health, employment and income, but not deprivation or poverty, likely because of government income supplements introduced early in the pandemic. Future lockdowns require planned responses to outbreaks and evidence-informed financial and mental health supports.

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CiteScore
3.90
自引率
4.00%
发文量
45
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