COVID-19疫情期间,中国重灾区儿童和青少年的心理健康状况恶化。

Journal of psychiatry and brain science Pub Date : 2021-10-01 Epub Date: 2021-10-27 DOI:10.20900/jpbs.20210020
Jing Ma, Jun Ding, Jiawen Hu, Kai Wang, Shuaijun Xiao, Ting Luo, Shuxiang Yu, Chuntao Liu, Yunxuan Xu, Yingxian Liu, Changhong Wang, Suqin Guo, Xiaohua Yang, Haidong Song, Yaoguo Geng, Yu Jin, Huayun Chen, Chunyu Liu
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摘要

鉴于新型冠状病毒(COVID-19)对全球公共卫生的威胁,我们试图阐明 COVID-19 对中国儿童和青少年心理健康的影响。通过在线自我报告调查问卷,我们旨在发现疫情对青少年心理的影响及其引发心理健康症状的相关风险因素。在全国范围封锁的后期阶段,我们通过网络社交媒体、微信和QQ在中国确诊COVID-19病例最多的五个省份进行了心理健康调查。我们使用自制的调查问卷,询问了 6 至 18 岁儿童和青少年的人口统计学信息、心理状况以及其他生活方式和 COVID 相关变量。共有 17,740 名拥有有效调查数据的儿童和青少年参与了研究。与 COVID-19 爆发前相比,分别有 10022 人(56.5%)、11611 人(65.5%)、10697 人(60.3%)、6868 人(38.7%)和 6225 人(35.1%)表现出更多的抑郁、焦虑、强迫、注意力不集中和睡眠相关问题。与初中生和小学生相比,高中生在抑郁和焦虑方面的变化更大。尽管在这项研究中,只有极少数儿童(0.1%)或其家庭成员(0.1%)感染了病毒,但这一流行病对心理的影响显然是深远的。父亲的焦虑似乎对儿童的心理症状影响最大,约占儿童整体症状变化的 33%。一旦考虑到父母的焦虑,其他因素只能解释不到 2% 的症状差异。在参与者看来,COVID-19 的传播极大地影响了儿童和青少年的心理状态。很明显,儿童和青少年,尤其是年龄较大的青少年,在大流行期间需要心理健康支持。我们发现的风险因素表明,减少父亲的焦虑对于解决青少年的心理健康问题尤为重要。
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Children and Adolescents' Psychological Well-Being Became Worse in Heavily Hit Chinese Provinces during the COVID-19 Epidemic.

In light of the novel coronavirus's (COVID-19's) threat to public health worldwide, we sought to elucidate COVID-19's impacts on the mental health of children and adolescents in China. Through online self-report questionnaires, we aimed to discover the psychological effects of the pandemic and its associated risk factors for developing mental health symptoms in young people. We disseminated a mental health survey through online social media, WeChat, and QQ in the five Chinese provinces with the most confirmed cases of COVID-19 during the late stage of the country-wide lockdown. We used a self-made questionnaire that queried children and adolescents aged 6 to 18 on demographic information, psychological status, and other lifestyle and COVID-related variables. A total of 17,740 children and adolescents with valid survey data participated in the study. 10,022 (56.5%), 11,611 (65.5%), 10,697 (60.3%), 6868 (38.7%), and 6225 (35.1%) participants presented, respectively, more depressive, anxious, compulsive, inattentive, and sleep-related problems compared to before the outbreak of COVID-19. High school students reported a greater change in depression and anxiety than did middle school and primary school students. Despite the fact that very few children (0.1%) or their family members (0.1%) contracted the virus in this study, the psychological impact of the pandemic was clearly profound. Fathers' anxiety appeared to have the strongest influence on a children's psychological symptoms, explaining about 33% of variation in the child's overall symptoms. Other factors only explained less than 2% of the variance in symptoms once parents' anxiety was accounted for. The spread of COVID-19 significantly influenced the psychological state of children and adolescents in participants' view. It is clear that children and adolescents, particularly older adolescents, need mental health support during the pandemic. The risk factors we uncovered suggest that reducing fathers' anxiety is particularly critical to addressing young people's mental health disorders in this time.

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