4.0 Article

Coping and Mental Health in Early Adolescence during COVID-19

Journal

RESEARCH ON CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 9, Pages 1113-1123

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10802-021-00821-0

Keywords

COVID-19; Coronavirus; Adolescents; Mental health; Pandemic

Funding

  1. Expanding the Science and Practice of Gratitude Project by UC Berkeley's Greater Good Science Center
  2. UC Davis
  3. John Templeton Foundation
  4. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), National Institutes of Health [UL1TR002489]
  5. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development through the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill [T32-HD007376]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study examined changes in mental health symptoms in youth from the southeastern United States during the COVID-19 outbreak, highlighting the importance of self-efficacy, optimism, and coping abilities. Symptom increases were more severe in youth with lower self-efficacy and higher emotion-focused coping.
The current longitudinal study examines changes in overall mental health symptomatology from before to after the COVID-19 outbreak in youth from the southeastern United States as well as the potential mitigating effects of self-efficacy, optimism, and coping. A sample of 105 parent-child dyads participated in the study (49% boys; 81% European American, 1% Alaska Native/American Indian, 9% Asian/Asian American; 4% Black/African American; 4% Latinx; and 4% other; 87% mothers; 25% high school graduate without college education; 30% degree from 4-year college; 45% graduate or professional school). Parents completed surveys when children were aged 6-9, 8-12, 9-13, and 12-16, with the last assessments occurring between May 13, 2020 and July 1, 2020 during the COVID-19 outbreak. Children also completed online surveys at ages 11-16 assessing self-efficacy, optimism, and coping. Multi-level modeling analyses showed a within-person increase in mental health symptoms from before to after the outbreak after controlling for changes associated with maturation. Symptom increases were mitigated in youth with greater self-efficacy and (to some extent) problem-focused engaged coping, and exacerbated in youth with greater emotion-focused engaged and disengaged coping. Implications of this work include the importance of reinforcing self-efficacy in youth during times of crisis, such as the pandemic, and the potential downsides of emotion-focused coping as an early response to the crisis for youth.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.0
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available