4.3 Article

My Son Can't Socially Distance or Wear a Mask: How Families of Preschool Children with Severe Developmental Delays and Challenging Behavior Experienced the COVID-19 Pandemic

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/19315864.2021.1874578

Keywords

COVID-19; coronavirus; pandemic; intellectual and Developmental Disabilities; developmental delays; challenging behavior; family; children; survey

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research Health Technology Assessment [15/162/02]
  2. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR)

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Families of children with developmental delays faced challenges during the pandemic, including lack of specific information, difficulty in following social distancing rules, disruption of services, and negative impact on parental mental health and child's skills. Post-pandemic concerns include access to services, long-term impact of school closures, and parental unemployment.
Background: Families of children with developmental delays (DD) prior to the COVID-19 pandemic experienced inequalities in accessing health and social care services. Measures put in place to combat the spread of the coronavirus have potentially exacerbated existing inequalities and have led to additional pressures for these families. Methods: We carried out a cross-sectional online survey of parents of young children with moderate to severe DD and challenging behaviors living in England, UK. We asked about the impact the pandemic has had on their family well-being, receipt of support, and post COVID-19 concerns. Results: Eighty-eight parents who are participants in an ongoing clinical trial (EPICC-ID) reported a broad range of challenges they faced during the pandemic: lack of information specific to children with DD; difficulties following social distancing and isolation rules; disruption or pause of health and social care services; deterioration in parental mental health and regression of the child's skills. Future access to services, negative long-term impact of school closures, parental unemployment were the parents' main post-COVID-19 concerns. Conclusions: Families of children with significant developmental delays fear lasting impact of the pandemic on their own psychological and material wellbeing and on their child's health. These families require urgent help to meet major health and social care needs and should be prioritized within an overall children's mental health strategy. The article includes a commentary from parents with lived experience.

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