在美国黑人占多数的儿童样本中,照顾者对 COVID-19 的恐惧、行为和感知影响的影响

Amanpreet Bhogal, Autumm Heeter, Leah Gowatch, Tanja Jovanovic PhD, Hilary A. Marusak PhD
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摘要

在缓冲和/或加剧青少年对2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)的恐惧和行为方面,照顾者可能起着至关重要的作用。然而,很少有研究对少数种族或少数族裔儿童的这些关联进行研究,这些儿童历来被边缘化,可能更容易受到心理后果的影响。在此,我们以大多数黑人(71.9%)儿童为样本,研究了照顾者和儿童之间在 COVID-19 相关恐惧、行为和影响方面的关联。在 2019-2020 学年期间,我们从密歇根州底特律地区的三所学校招募了儿童(人数 = 64,女性 24,年龄 7-10 岁)。2020 年 3 月学校停课后,我们邀请儿童及其看护人在 2020 年 5 月和 8 月完成远程调查。我们研究了儿童和看护者与 COVID-19 相关的恐惧、预防行为和感知影响之间的关联。我们还研究了照料者与儿童关系的各个方面(即亲密程度、冲突)是否会调节这些关联。照护者与儿童对社会疏远的恐惧、预防行为和对 COVID-19 影响的认知呈正相关。随着时间的推移,照料者与儿童预防行为之间的正相关性会加强,并受到照料者与儿童亲密程度的调节。这些研究结果表明,照顾者可能会影响边缘化青少年的恐惧、预防行为和对流行病影响的认知。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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The impact of caregivers on COVID-19 fears, behaviors, and perceived impact in a majority Black American sample of children

Caregivers may play an essential role in buffering and/or exacerbating coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) fears and behaviors in youth. However, few studies have examined these associations in children from racial or ethnic minority groups, who have been historically marginalized and may be disproportionately susceptible to psychological consequences. Here, we examined the associations among caregivers and children in COVID-19-related fears, behaviors, and impact in a majority Black (71.9%) sample of children. Children (N = 64, 24 females, ages 7–10 years) were recruited from three Detroit, Michigan-area schools during the 2019–2020 school year. Following school shutdowns in March 2020, children and their caregivers were invited to complete remote surveys in May and August 2020. We examined the associations among child and caregiver COVID-19-related fears, preventive behaviors, and perceived impact. We also examined whether aspects of the caregiver–child relationship (i.e., closeness, conflicts) moderated these associations. Caregiver–child fears about social distancing, preventive behaviors, and the perceived impact of COVID-19 were positively correlated. The positive correlation between caregiver–child preventive behaviors strengthened over time and was moderated by caregiver–child closeness. These findings suggest that caregivers may impact fear as well as preventive behaviors and perceived impact of the pandemic in marginalized youth.

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