Clinically significant depression among parents during the COVID-19 pandemic: Examining the protective role of family relationships.

IF 1.9 Q2 FAMILY STUDIES Couple and Family Psychology-Research and Practice Pub Date : 2021-06-17 DOI:10.1037/cfp0000175
B. Russell, R. Tambling, A. Horton, M. Hutchison, A. Tomkunas
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引用次数: 17

Abstract

Responding to families at heightened risk for mental health burdens during the COVID-19 pandemic is critical—evidence suggests parents face elevated burdens compared to their nonparent counterparts. Building on studies that demonstrate a spillover of stress across domains and individuals within families, this study examines longitudinal predictors of elevated risks for clinical depression among parents based on relational family indicators, COVID-specific stressors, and stress and emotion regulation indicators. Baseline data were collected from parents (n = 176;average age 37.04, 50% female) on April 27–28, 2020, 5 weeks after the first U.S. quarantines began. Follow-up data were collected 30 days later. Results indicated concerning levels of parents’ mental health symptoms over this short time span, including elevated stressors and exacerbated mental health symptoms for approximately one-quarter of parents. Given the need for agile service responses for those at the greatest risk, this article examines predictions of clinically significant depression through binary logistic regression. These individuals were more likely to report greater anxiety and stress symptoms, as well as report less closeness in their parent–child relationships;couple satisfaction was not a significant predictor of depression. Implications include recommended agile responses to alleviate distress and expand access to mental health supports, particularly in light of pervasive shelter-in place orders that limit access to previously established coping supports and sources of social connection (e.g., schools or community centers), that are anticipated to recur in the months ahead. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved) © 2021 American Psychological Association
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COVID-19大流行期间父母临床显著抑郁:检验家庭关系的保护作用
在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,应对心理健康负担风险增加的家庭至关重要——有证据表明,与非父母相比,父母面临的负担更高。本研究以证明压力在家庭中跨领域和跨个体溢出的研究为基础,根据相关家庭指标、特定于covid - 19的压力源以及压力和情绪调节指标,研究了父母临床抑郁风险升高的纵向预测因素。基线数据收集于2020年4月27日至28日,即美国首次隔离开始5周后,从父母(n = 176;平均年龄37.04,50%为女性)处收集。30天后收集随访数据。结果表明,在这么短的时间内,父母的心理健康症状水平有关,包括大约四分之一的父母的压力源升高和心理健康症状加剧。考虑到那些处于最大风险的人需要敏捷的服务响应,本文通过二元逻辑回归检查临床显著抑郁症的预测。这些人更有可能报告更大的焦虑和压力症状,以及亲子关系的亲密程度较低;夫妻满意度不是抑郁症的重要预测因子。影响包括建议采取灵活的应对措施,以减轻痛苦和扩大获得心理健康支持的机会,特别是鉴于普遍存在的就地安置令限制了获得先前建立的应对支持和社会联系来源(例如学校或社区中心)的机会,预计未来几个月将再次出现这种情况。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c) 2021 APA,保留所有权利)©2021美国心理协会
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Couple and Family Psychology: Research and Practice ® (CFP) is a scholarly journal publishing peer-reviewed papers representing the science and practice of family psychology. CFP is the official publication of APA Division 43 (Society for Couple and Family Psychology) and is intended to be a forum for scholarly dialogue regarding the most important emerging issues in the field, a primary outlet for research particularly as it impacts practice and for papers regarding education, public policy, and the identity of the profession of family psychology. As the official journal for the Society, CFP will provide a home for the members of the division and those in other fields interested in the most cutting edge issues in family psychology. Unlike other journals in the field, CFP is focused specifically on family psychology as a specialty practice, unique scientific domain, and critical element of psychological knowledge. CFP will seek and publish scholarly manuscripts that make a contribution to the knowledge base of family psychology specifically, and the science and practice of working with individuals, couples and families from a family systems perspective in general.
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