Examining Children and adolescent mental health trajectories during the COVID‐19 pandemic: Findings from a year of the Co‐SPACE study

Author:

Guzman Holst Carolina1ORCID,Bowes Lucy1ORCID,Waite Polly12,Skripkauskaite Simona12ORCID,Shum Adrienne12,Pearcey Samantha12,Raw Jasmine3ORCID,Patalay Praveetha4,Creswell Cathy12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology University of Oxford Oxford UK

2. Department of Psychiatry University of Oxford Oxford UK

3. School of Psychology and Clinical Language Sciences University of Reading Reading UK

4. Centre for Longitudinal Studies and MRC Unit for Lifelong Health and Ageing University College London London UK

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundA major concern throughout the COVID‐19 pandemic has been on young people's experiences with mental health. In this study we mapped children and adolescents' mental health trajectories over 13 months of the pandemic and examine whether family, peer, and individual‐level factors were associated with trajectory membership.MethodsThis study focuses on a sub‐sample from the Co‐SPACE study of 3322 children and adolescents (aged 4–16 years) for whom parents completed a survey at Time 0 and at least one follow‐up survey between March 2020 and May 2021. We used growth mixture models to examine trajectories in emotional, conduct, and hyperactivity/inattention difficulties using the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire and multinomial logistic regression models to estimate factors associated with individual trajectory membership.ResultsThe average trend in young people's mental health appeared to follow changes in national guidelines regarding the pandemic. Distinct trends in GMM models highlighting individual differences showed that a 5‐trajectory model best explained the changes in emotional problems whilst 4‐trajectory models best explained variation in hyperactivity/inattention and conduct problems. While most young people followed low stable (62%–85%) or moderate stable (28%) symptom trajectories, 14%–31% experienced very high, high stable or increasing mental health difficulties. Young people following high stable trajectories were more likely to have special educational needs and/or neurodevelopmental disorders, parents reporting higher levels of distress and parent‐child conflict, and were less likely to have at least one close friend.ConclusionsMost young people adapted well and experienced low stable symptoms, but nearly one third experienced high stable or increasing mental health difficulties. Young people with complex needs and parents with higher psychological distress were particularly vulnerable to high stable problems while those with positive peer relationships were less vulnerable. This study offers insight into potential factors that can be addressed using targeted interventions to improve the wellbeing of parents and young people in the event of future lockdowns and school closures.

Funder

Calleva Foundation

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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