A Longitudinal Cohort Study of Youth Mental Health and Substance use Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ontario, Canada: An Exploratory Analysis.

IF 1.1 JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION Pub Date : 2022-11-01 Epub Date: 2022-05-29 DOI:10.1177/07067437221097906
Natasha Y Sheikhan, Lisa D Hawke, Clement Ma, Darren Courtney, Peter Szatmari, Kristin Cleverley, Aristotle Voineskos, Amy Cheung, Joanna Henderson
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Abstract

Background: Youth mental health appears to have been negatively impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. The impact on substance use is less clear, as is the impact on subgroups of youth, including those with pre-existing mental health or substance use challenges.

Objective: This hypothesis-generating study examines the longitudinal evolution of youth mental health and substance use from before the COVID-19 pandemic to over one year into the pandemic among youth with pre-existing mental health or substance use challenges.

Method: A total of 168 youth aged 14-24 participated. Participants provided sociodemographic data, as well as internalizing disorder, externalizing disorder, and substance use data prior to the pandemic's onset, then every two months between April 2020-2021. Linear mixed models and Generalized Estimating Equations were used to analyze the effect of time on mental health and substance use. Exploratory analyses were conducted to examine interactions with sociodemographic and clinical characteristics.

Results: There was no change in internalizing or externalizing disorder scores from prior to the pandemic to any point throughout the first year of the pandemic. Substance use scores during the pandemic declined compared to pre-pandemic scores. Exploratory analyses suggest that students appear to have experienced more mental health repercussions than non-students; other sociodemographic and clinical characteristics did not appear to be associated with mental health or substance use trajectories.

Conclusions: While mental health remained stable and substance use declined from before the COVID-19 pandemic to during the pandemic among youth with pre-existing mental health challenges, some youth experienced greater challenges than others. Longitudinal monitoring among various population subgroups is crucial to identifying higher risk populations. This information is needed to provide empirical evidence to inform future research directions.

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加拿大安大略省 COVID-19 大流行之前和期间青少年心理健康和药物使用的纵向队列研究:探索性分析。
背景:青少年的心理健康似乎受到了 COVID-19 大流行的负面影响。对药物使用的影响以及对青少年亚群(包括那些已经存在心理健康或药物使用问题的青少年)的影响则不太明确:本假设性研究探讨了从 COVID-19 大流行之前到大流行后一年多的时间里,已有心理健康问题或药物使用问题的青少年在心理健康和药物使用方面的纵向演变情况:共有 168 名年龄在 14-24 岁之间的青少年参与。参与者在大流行开始前提供了社会人口学数据以及内化障碍、外化障碍和药物使用数据,然后在 2020 年 4 月至 2021 年期间每两个月提供一次数据。我们使用线性混合模型和广义估计方程来分析时间对心理健康和药物使用的影响。还进行了探索性分析,以研究与社会人口学和临床特征之间的相互作用:结果:从大流行前到大流行第一年的任何时候,内化或外化障碍得分都没有变化。与大流行前相比,大流行期间的药物使用得分有所下降。探索性分析表明,学生似乎比非学生经历了更多的心理健康影响;其他社会人口和临床特征似乎与心理健康或药物使用轨迹无关:结论:从 COVID-19 大流行之前到大流行期间,已有心理健康问题的青少年的心理健康保持稳定,药物使用有所减少,但有些青少年比其他青少年经历了更大的挑战。对不同人群进行纵向监测对于识别高风险人群至关重要。我们需要这些信息来提供经验证据,为未来的研究方向提供依据。
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JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN OSTEOPATHIC ASSOCIATION MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
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期刊介绍: JAOA—The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association is the official scientific publication of the American Osteopathic Association, as well as the premier scholarly, peer-reviewed publication of the osteopathic medical profession. The JAOA"s mission is to advance medicine through the scholarly publication of peer-reviewed osteopathic medical research. The JAOA"s goals are: 1. To be the authoritative scholarly publication of the osteopathic medical profession 2. To advance the traditional tenets of osteopathic medicine while encouraging the development of emerging concepts relevant to the profession"s distinctiveness
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