4.6 Article

Vulnerability pathways to mental health outcomes in children and parents during COVID-19

Journal

CURRENT PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 20, Pages 17348-17358

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12144-021-02459-z

Keywords

Vulnerability; Mental health; Stress; Deprivation; Family functioning

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This study examined the pathways from pre-existing psychosocial and economic vulnerability to mental health difficulties and stress in families during the COVID-19 pandemic. The results showed that psychosocial and economic vulnerability increased the risk of material deprivation, leading to parent and child stress and mental health difficulties due to COVID-19 restrictions. There were reciprocal effects between increased child and parent stress and greater mental health difficulties over time within families. The study highlights the importance of addressing psychosocial and economic vulnerability in prevention policies and parent and child mental health services during the pandemic.
We examined pathways from pre-existing psychosocial and economic vulnerability to mental health difficulties and stress in families during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data from two time points from a multi-cohort study initiated during the COVID-19 pandemic were used. Parents of children 6-18 years completed questionnaires on pre-COVID-19 socioeconomic and demographic factors in addition to material deprivation and stress due to COVID-19 restrictions, mental health, and family functioning. Youth 10 years and older also completed their own measures of mental health and stress. Using structural equation modelling, pathways from pre-existing vulnerability to material deprivation and stress due to COVID-19 restrictions, mental health, and family functioning, including reciprocal pathways, were estimated. Pre-existing psychosocial and economic vulnerability predicted higher material deprivation due to COVID-19 restrictions which in turn was associated with parent and child stress due to restrictions and mental health difficulties. The reciprocal effects between increased child and parent stress and greater mental health difficulties at Time 1 and 2 were significant. Reciprocal effects between parent and child mental health were also significant. Finally, family functioning at Time 2 was negatively impacted by child and parent mental health and stress due to COVID-19 restrictions at Time 1. Psychosocial and economic vulnerability is a risk factor for material deprivation during COVID-19, increasing the risk of mental health difficulties and stress, and their reciprocal effects over time within families. Implications for prevention policy and parent and child mental health services are discussed.

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