4.5 Article

A Cross-Temporal Meta-Analysis of Changes in Left-Behind Children's Mental Health in China

Journal

CHILDREN-BASEL
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/children9040464

Keywords

(non-) left-behind children; mental health status; mental health test; cross-temporal meta-analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. scientific research project of Huangshan University [2021GJYY007]
  2. 2020 Anhui Province Social Science Innovation and Development Research Project [2020CX037]
  3. Open Research Fund of College of Teacher Education, Zhejiang Normal University [jykf20066]

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Research using the Mental Health Test (MHT) has shown that left-behind children (LBC) experience a slight but significant decline in mental health over time, especially for left-behind boys (LBBs). The mental health of LBC in junior high and elementary school has shown a stable and significant deterioration. Furthermore, LBC with neither parent present have a significantly worse mental health status compared to those with one parent present.
A considerable body of research using the Mental Health Test (MHT) has explored the psychological repercussions of the physical separation of children from one or both parents as they pursue better economic prospects in cities. Generally, these studies compare the mental health status (MHS) between left-behind children (LBC) and non-left-behind children (NLBC). That notwithstanding, little is known about the real policy impact of these studies on the ground over the years. Using a relevant search strategy and selection criteria, we identified qualified studies (N = 102: 2004 to 2019). Cross-temporal meta-analysis (CTMA) was performed on these studies for dynamic trends. Our results demonstrate: (1) a slight but significant change in MHS of both LBC and NLBC, with LBC being significantly worse off over time; (2) a significant deterioration in MHS of LBC over time, particularly among left-behind boys (LBBs); (3) a stable and significant decline in MHS of left-behind junior high and elementary school students, respectively; and (4) a more substantial degradation in MHS of LBC with both parents absent compared with LBC with a parent present. The findings reveal that the efforts of, and collaboration among, researchers, policy experts and politicians are producing results. Nevertheless, more targeted research is needed to unearth the underlying issues that generate the differences among subpopulations of LBC to better inform pragmatic interventions for collective psychological wellness of LBC.

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