| Literature DB >> 32980318 |
Liubiana Arantes de Araújo1, Cássio Frederico Veloso2, Matheus de Campos Souza3, João Marcos Coelho de Azevedo3, Giulio Tarro4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This was a systematic review of studies that examined the impact of epidemics or social restriction on mental and developmental health in parents and children/adolescents. SOURCE OF DATA: The PubMed, WHO COVID-19, and SciELO databases were searched on March 15, 2020, and on April 25, 2020, filtering for children (0-18 years) and humans. SYNTHESIS OF DATA: The tools used to mitigate the threat of a pandemic such as COVID-19 may very well threaten child growth and development. These tools - such as social restrictions, shutdowns, and school closures - contribute to stress in parents and children and can become risk factors that threaten child growth and development and may compromise the Sustainable Development Goals. The studies reviewed suggest that epidemics can lead to high levels of stress in parents and children, which begin with concerns about children becoming infected. These studies describe several potential mental and emotional consequences of epidemics such as COVID-19, H1N1, AIDS, and Ebola: severe anxiety or depression among parents and acute stress disorder, post-traumatic stress, anxiety disorders, and depression among children. These data can be related to adverse childhood experiences and elevated risk of toxic stress. The more adverse experiences, the greater the risk of developmental delays and health problems in adulthood, such as cognitive impairment, substance abuse, depression, and non-communicable diseases.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Child development; Coronavirus; SARS-COV2; Sustainable development goals; Toxic stress
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32980318 PMCID: PMC7510529 DOI: 10.1016/j.jped.2020.08.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pediatr (Rio J) ISSN: 0021-7557 Impact factor: 2.197
Figure 1Screening profile.
Summary of the studies included in this review.
| Author | Country | Study type | Critical appraisal toll | Objective | Methods |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Almond (2006) | United States | Retrospective cohort | 6/10 CASP | Assess the long-term consequences of the 1918 pandemic | Study of American census data from 1960 to 1980 |
| Wang et al. (2020) | China | Cross sectional | 8/10 CASP | Assess the immediate psychological response after the pandemic | Anonymous online survey |
| Sprang and Silman (2013) | England | Cross sectional | 9/10 CASP | Investigate the psychosocial responses of children and their parents to pandemic disasters, specifically measuring responses to Posttraumatic Stress Disorder | Interview of 586 parents and filling in the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Response Index at the University of California |
| Sharp et al. (2014) | South Africa | Cross sectional | 6/10 CASP | Asses the difficulties faced by orphans associated with HIV/AIDS | Interview of 466 orphans |
| Kamara et al. (2017) | Sierra Leone | Cross sectional | 4/10 CASP | Evaluate a mental health awareness and promotion project amid the epidemic high mortality outbreak | Author analysis about the project |
| Mohammed et al. (2015) | Nigeria | Cross sectional | 7/10 CASP | Assess the psychological distress of patients who survived Ebola or had contact with contaminants | Interview of 117 patients through surveys |
| Lachman et al. (2002) | NA | Qualitative | N/A | Assess the challenges facing child protection in the 21st century, with an emphasis on poverty, HIV/AIDS infection and war | Analysis of articles, previous research and economic data |
| Xie et al. (2020) | China | Online Survey | 8/10 CASP | Investigate symptoms of stress, anxiety and depression among students due to confinement | Interview of 1784 students through online survey |
| Brooks et al. (2020) | NA | Systematic review | High AMSTAR 2 | Explore the likely effects of confinement on mental health and psychological well-being and the factors that contribute to or mitigate these effects | Analysis of previous articles and research |