Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, University of New Orleans, USA
Abstract
Abstract
Objective
COVID-19 has had unprecedented effects on American families, including increases in depression, anxiety, and irritability for both parents and children. While parents and children influence each other’s psychological functioning during non-disaster times, this effect may be amplified during times of disaster. The current study investigated how COVID-19 influenced covariance of depressive symptoms and irritability in children and their parents.
Methods
Three hundred and ninety-one parents and their 8- to 17-year-old children (Mage = 10.68 years old, 70% male, 86% White) from a large sample of children and parents, primarily from Southeastern Louisiana, completed self-report measures of depression and irritability approximately 6 weeks into the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as providing retrospective reports of their symptoms prior to the pandemic. Actor–partner interdependence models were used to measure the reciprocal effects of parent symptoms on children and vice versa, both before and during the pandemic.
Results
Actor effects in both the depressive symptoms and irritability models suggested that pre-COVID-19 depressive symptoms and irritability were robust predictors of early-COVID-19 depressive symptoms and irritability for both parents and children. Partner effects were also detected in the irritability model, in that parental irritability prior to COVID-19 was associated with decreased child irritability during the pandemic. Both before and during the pandemic, associations between parent and child depressive symptoms and irritability scores were weaker in families evidencing greater dysfunction.
Conclusions
Results suggest that COVID-19-related stress is associated with increases in both parent and child symptomatology, and that family relationships likely influence associations between these symptoms.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Reference71 articles.
1. Comorbidity of PTSD, major depression, and substance use disorder among adolescent victims of the spring 2011 tornadoes in Alabama and Joplin, Missouri;Adams;Psychiatry: Interpersonal and Biological Processes,2015
2. Preschoolers' psychopathology and temperament predict mothers' later mood disorders;Allmann;Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology,2016
3. Reductions in 2020 US life expectancy due to COVID-19 and the disproportionate impact on the Black and Latino populations;Andrasfay;Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,2021
4. The development of a short questionnaire for use in epidemiological studies of depression in children and adolescents;Angold;International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research,1995
5. Childhood family instability and mental health problems during late adolescence: a test of two mediation models—the TRAILS study;Bakker;Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology,2012
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献