| Literature DB >> 33110413 |
Elizabeth M Westrupp1, Gery Karantzas1, Jacqui A Macdonald1,2,3, Lisa Olive1, George Youssef1,2, Christopher J Greenwood1,2, Emma Sciberras1,2,3, Matthew Fuller-Tyszkiewicz1, Subhadra Evans1, Antonina Mikocka-Walus1, Mathew Ling1, Robert Cummins1, Delyse Hutchinson1,2,3,4, Glenn Melvin1,5, Julian W Fernando1, Samantha Teague1, Amanda G Wood1,2,6, John W Toumbourou1, Tomer Berkowitz1, Jake Linardon1,2, Peter G Enticott1, Mark A Stokes1, Jane McGillivray1, Craig A Olsson1,2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic presents significant risks to the mental health and wellbeing of Australian families. Employment and economic uncertainty, chronic stress, anxiety, and social isolation are likely to have negative impacts on parent mental health, couple and family relationships, as well as child health and development.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; child mental health; couple conflict; family functioning ; father; mental health; mother; parenting
Year: 2020 PMID: 33110413 PMCID: PMC7488979 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.555750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Overview of measures included in the COVID-19 Pandemic Adjustment Survey (CPAS).
| Demographics | Family demographics and socio-economic questions | Baseline |
| COVID-19 | COVID-19 factors (adapted from the CoRonavIruS Health Impact Survey (CRISIS) V0.1. ( | Baseline-fortnightly |
| Personal well-being index adult ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Introvert/extrovert | Baseline | |
| Depression and anxiety scale (DASS) 21-item version ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Mental or physical health diagnosis | Baseline | |
| Difficulties in emotion regulation scale-16 item version ( | Baseline | |
| Positive and negative affect schedule short form ( | Baseline | |
| Physical activity (1 item) from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC)a; sleep (one item) from LSAC | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Alcohol consumption (1 item) from LSAC; cigarette smoking (one item) from LSAC | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Experiences in close relationships scale–relationship structures (ECR-RS) ( | Baseline | |
| Brief resilience scale (BRS) ( | Baseline | |
| UCLA loneliness scale ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Utopian thinking (one item) | Baseline | |
| Adapted short-form of the self-expressiveness in the family questionnaire ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Stressful life events over the past 12 months ( | Baseline | |
| Argumentative relationship scale used in LSAC ( | Fortnightly | |
| Perceived relationships quality component (PRQC) questionnaire ( | Baseline | |
| Social support (1 item) from LSAC; social provisions scale (one item) ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Postcodes used to derive the Socio-Economic Indexes for Areas (SEIFA) advantage and disadvantage ( | Baseline | |
| Interpersonal mindfulness in parenting (IEM-P) ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Global child health | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Professional diagnosis or treatment | Baseline | |
| The short mood and feelings questionnaire (SMFQ) ( | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Child mood (eight items) (fortnightly survey only) | ||
| Physical activity (one item) adapted from LSAC; sleep pattern and regularity (two item) from LSAC | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Screen time (two items) from LSAC | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Likelihood of using an online intervention (one item) | Baseline-fortnightly | |
| Likelihood of using self-guided or therapist assisted online mental health intervention (two items) | Baseline-fortnightly |
The Longitudinal Study of Australian Children (LSAC) is a population-representative government-funded study comprising of two cohorts of children and their families recruited in 2005 and followed biennially (together, N = 10,000).