Literature DB >> 33968328

Age-related effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health of children and adolescents.

Stefanie J Schmidt1, Lara P Barblan2, Irina Lory1, Markus A Landolt2,3.   

Abstract

Background: Children and adolescents are affected in various ways by the lockdown measures due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, it is crucial to better understand the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health in this age-group. Objective: The objective was to investigate and compare the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on mental health in three age groups (1-6 years, 7-10 years, 11-19 years) and to examine the associations with psychological factors.
Methods: An anonymous online survey was conducted from 9 April to 11 May 2020 during the acute phase of major lockdown measures. In this cross-sectional study, children and adolescents aged between 1 and 19 years were recruited as a population-based sample. They were eligible if they were residents in Austria, Germany, Liechtenstein or Switzerland, were parents/caregivers of a child aged between 1 and 10 years or adolescents ≥11 years, had sufficient German language skills and provided informed consent.
Results: Among 5823 participants, between 2.2% and 9.9% reported emotional and behavioural problems above the clinical cut-off and between 15.3% and 43.0% reported an increase in these problems during the pandemic. Significant age-related effects were found regarding the type and frequency of problems (χ2 (4)≥50.2, P ≤ 0.001). While preschoolers (1-6 years) had the largest increase in oppositional-defiant behaviours, adolescents reported the largest increase in emotional problems. Adolescents experienced a significantly larger decrease in emotional and behavioural problems than both preschoolers and school-children. Sociodemographic variables, exposure to and appraisal of COVID-19, psychotherapy before COVID-19 and parental mental health significantly predicted change in problem-scores (F ≥ 3.69, P ≤ 0.001).
Conclusion: A substantial proportion of children and adolescents experience age-related mental health problems during the COVID-19 pandemic. These problems should be monitored, and support should be offered to risk-groups to improve communication, emotion regulation and appraisal style.
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Entities:  

Keywords:  COVID-19; Pandemic; adolescence; age; children; development; mental health

Year:  2021        PMID: 33968328      PMCID: PMC8075089          DOI: 10.1080/20008198.2021.1901407

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Psychotraumatol        ISSN: 2000-8066


Introduction

The COVID-19 pandemic has affected almost all countries in the world. To contain the spread of the virus lockdown measures were implemented that have severely affected daily life. Several studies have demonstrated that public health restrictions, such as quarantine, lead to increased distress and negative psychological effects in many individuals (Brooks et al., 2020). These effects have been consistently reported for the COVID-19 pandemic in adults (Qiu et al., 2020; Roger et al., 2020; Wang, Pan, et al., 2020). However, the effects on children and adolescents are largely unknown (Lee, 2020) although this age-group is affected in various ways. First, the closure of child care and educational institutions, playgrounds, and leisure facilities has substantially disrupted the social networks of children and adolescents. Peer contacts are a major source of help when experiencing mental health problems and are especially relevant during adolescence. Therefore, young people might be particularly vulnerable to the effects caused by physical distancing measures and have shown high levels of loneliness, depression and anxiety during and after enforced social isolation (Loades et al., 2020; Sharma, Miguel, & Sharma, 2020). Second, children and their parents have been challenged by the closure of schools and the need for home-based distance-learning models. These challenges are exacerbated for families with low income, confined living conditions, economic uncertainty, and the need to work remotely or being unable to work. This may have led to distress in child-parent interactions with a negative impact on their relationship or even increased rates of parental burnout and child maltreatment (Cluver et al., 2020; Griffith, 2020; Russell, Hutchison, Tambling, Tomkunas, & Horton, 2020). Furthermore, the closure of schools may have triggered or enhanced worries in students and their parents about their academic success and may have increased existing mental health problems due to loss of school routines, social stabilization and access to mental health services (Fegert & Schulze, 2020; Fegert, Vitiello, Plener, & Clemens, 2020; Lee, 2020). Third, due to their limited cognitive and verbal capacity very young children might have difficulties in understanding changes in their daily routine (e.g. absence of regular caregivers) and in processing complex information about COVID-19. They also have to deal with their parents’ worries about the pandemic and its consequences (e.g. fear of death of relatives, financial loss), which is particularly challenging given their limited reasoning and coping skills. Further, studies suggest that very young children are a uniquely vulnerable group to experience adverse and traumatic events, to react to them in a particular distressing way and to suffer from detrimental long-term effects on their development. This is due to their rapid emotional and physiological development and their strong dependency on their caregivers as the primary source of their coping socialization and to protect them physically as well as emotionally (Dalton, Rapa, & Stein, 2020; De Young & Landolt, 2018; Russell et al., 2020). Taken together, these potential risks for children and adolescents make them a vulnerable group at each age, which should be given research priority (Golberstein, Wen, & Miller, 2020; Holmes et al., 2020). Yet, empirical studies on the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on their mental health are sparse. Studies (Liang et al., 2020; Wang, Zhang, Zhao, Zhang, & Jiang, 2020) with mixed age-groups between 12 and 50 years found no evidence for an age-related effect on mental health problems. A preliminary study (Jiao, Wang, & Liu, 2020) found that more than 30% of the children and adolescents in a Chinese general population sample aged 3–18 years experienced symptoms of clinginess, inattention and irritability. Notably, preschoolers had significantly more severe symptoms of clinging and fear about the health of relatives compared to children aged 6–18 years. The latter reported significantly more symptoms of inattention and obsessive requests for updates about the pandemic. A study (Liu et al., 2020) including a sample of preschoolers aged 4–6 years found evidence for sleep disturbances characterized by later bed- and wake-times as well as longer nocturnal and shorter nap sleep durations. Changes in eating behaviour, stress, reduced exposure to sunlight and more technology use during lockdown may have exerted such a negative effect on the sleeping patterns of children (Becker & Gregory, 2020). Focusing on school-children only, a study (Xie et al., 2020) found high rates of depression (23%) and anxiety (19%). Additionally, 52% reported to worry at least to a moderate degree. Higher age, stricter COVID-19 measures, and more pronounced worry and optimism were significantly associated with depression but not anxiety. Gender had neither a significant effect on depression nor on anxiety. With regard to adolescent-samples (Buzzi et al., 2020; Guessoum et al., 2020; Oosterhoff & Palmer, 2020; Saurabh & Ranjan, 2020; Zhou et al., 2020), participants also reported high rates of moderate to severe depression, anxiety, worry, helplessness, fear and dysfunctional attitudes towards the pandemic. On the contrary, a decrease in the usage of most substances was found during the lockdown. However, the frequency of both alcohol and cannabis use increased. Depression and fear of the infectivity of COVID-19 predicted solitary substance use (Dumas, Ellis, & Litt, 2020). As most of the aforementioned studies on the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of young people focused on either children or adolescents, a comparison of age-groups is not possible. Moreover, because most previous studies assessed current symptom levels, it remains unclear whether the reported symptoms had changed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Therefore, the primary aim of this study was to assess the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on emotional and behavioural problems of children and adolescents with a wide age-range from 1 to 19 years and to investigate how effects are related to age. Based on previous studies showing age-related stress reactions (McKinnon et al., 2016; Meiser-Stedman, Yule, Smith, Glucksman, & Dalgleish, 2005), we expected significant age-related effects on changes in emotional and behavioural problems experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Incorporating such a developmental psychopathology perspective seems promising as it might increase our understanding of symptom expression in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic by comparing responses across a broad age-range of children and adolescents. Such an understanding could also inform prevention- and intervention-strategies, ensuring that symptoms of special relevance for the respective age-group can be monitored carefully and targeted when necessary. We further hypothesized that sociodemographic variables, pre-existing risk factors present before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e. attendance of psychotherapy, chronic physical disease(s), significant life events), exposure to and appraisal of COVID-19, and parental mental health would be significantly associated with changes in emotional and behavioural problems.

Methods

Study design and participants

In this cross-sectional study, an anonymous online survey with an expected duration of 20 minutes was developed. Participants were eligible if they (1) were residents in Austria, Germany, Liechtenstein or Switzerland; (2) were parents/caregivers of a child aged between 1 and 10 years or if they were adolescents ≥11 years; (3) had sufficient German language skills to understand the questions and (4) provided informed consent to study participation.

Procedures

The study was approved by the Institutional Review Boards of the universities of Zurich (#20.4.1) and Bern (#2020-04-00002). The survey was conducted from 9 April to 11 May 2020 as this was the period with major and mainly parallel lockdown measures in the respective countries, in particular closed day-care facilities and schools. Recruitment of participants was performed via email circulation, social media, websites and newspapers. Participants were provided with links for three different age-groups: (1) preschool-children (1–6 years), (2) school-children (7–10 years) and (3) adolescents aged 11 years or older. The survey including the informed consent was answered by parents or legal guardians for children younger than 11 years and by adolescents (11–19 years) themselves. No compensation was provided.

Outcomes

Emotional and behavioural problems were the primary outcome as assessed by specific items drawn from the respective age-adapted German versions of the Child Behaviour Checklist (CBCL): for ages 1–6 years (CBCL/1.5–5; Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000), for ages 7–10 years (CBCL/6-18R; Döpfner, Plück, & Kinnen, 2014), and for ages 11–19 years (Youth Self Report, YSR/11-18R; Döpfner et al., 2014). In children aged 1–6 years, affective problems (10 items), anxiety (10 items) and oppositional-defiant behaviours (6 items) were assessed by parent-report using the DSM-oriented subscales of the CBCL/1.5–5 (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000). In children aged 7–10 years (CBCL/6-18R; Döpfner et al., 2014) and in adolescents aged 11–19 years (YSR/11-18R; Döpfner et al., 2014), problems corresponding to three established syndrome-scales were assessed: anxiety/depression (13 items), withdrawn/depression (8 items), aggressive behaviours (18 items CBCL/6-18R; 17 items YSR/11-18R) and three additional items (sleep, nightmares, and overtiredness). The CBCL/YSR are among the most widely used measures in children and adolescents with excellent psychometric properties (Nakamura, Ebesutani, Bernstein, & Chorpita, 2009). A specific behaviour in the CBCL/YSR is scored according to the manual on a three-point Likert scale (0 = not true, 1 = somewhat or sometimes true, 2 = very true or often true). Additionally, participants were asked in this study to indicate whether the respective behaviour occurred less (i.e. score of −1), equal (i.e. score of 0), or more since the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e. a score of +1). A raw summary change-score was calculated for each sub-/syndrome scale.

Covariates

The following covariates were assessed: sociodemographic variables (age, gender, living situation, parental education), pre-existing risk-factors (attendance of psychotherapy, chronic physical disease, life events), COVID-19 exposure, COVID-19 appraisals and parental mental health. Pre-existing risk-factors included questions (yes/no) whether the child/adolescent was in psychotherapy or had a chronic physical disease before COVID-19. Major family life events were assessed for the previous 6 months by the Life Event Scale (Landolt & Vollrath, 1998). This scale asks about the presence of 12 family life events resulting in a sum score between 0–12. Exposure to COVID-19 was measured by self-generated questions on events related to COVID-19: closure of child-care/school, child is/was diagnosed with COVID-19, family member is/was diagnosed with COVID-19, family member is/was quarantined, family member is/was in hospital and death of a person related to the family. A summary score was formed assigning a score of ‘1’ per confirmed item and a score of ‘0’ if not (see supplementary eTable 1 for an overview of all self-generated items). Appraisal was measured (1) by the degree of understanding of the child or adolescent about the COVID-19 pandemic used as a binary variable (yes/no) and (2) by three yes/no-questions about potential negative effects for the child/adolescent, family and parents resulting in a summary score between 0–3. Notably, appraisal questions captured the parental perception for children and the adolescents’ perception for the older age-group. Adolescent participants were additionally asked to answer three self-generated questions grounded in core concepts of stress-coping models (Groth et al., 2019; Lazarus & Folkman, 1984) on a three-point Likert-scale about the controllability of the situation (i.e. internal locus of control; Rotter, 1966), their confidence in being capable to deal with the situation efficiently (i.e. coping self-efficacy; Sandler, Kim-Bae, & MacKinnon, 2000), and the controllability of their emotions (i.e. emotion regulation; Gross, 1998). Parental mental health was assessed in children <11 years via report of the caregiver using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9; Kroenke, Spitzer, & Williams, 2001) and the Scale for General Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7; Spitzer, Kroenke, Williams, & Löwe, 2006) to measure the level of depressiveness and anxiety in the last 2 weeks. Both scales are well-validated screening instruments (Kroenke & Spitzer, 2002; Spitzer et al., 2006). The summary score of each measure was used. As a proxy for parental mental health, adolescents were asked to rate how worried their parents were about COVID-19 on a three-point Likert scale from ‘not at all worried’ to ‘very worried’.

Statistical analysis

Only full data-sets regarding outcome variables were analysed using SPSS 25 (IBM). We calculated means and standard deviations for continuous variables and frequencies for categorical variables. Statistical analyses were performed separately for the three age-groups: 1–6 (preschoolers), 7–10 (school-children) and 11–19 year olds (adolescents). Differences in frequencies of changes in emotional and behavioural problems between age-groups were tested on item-level by Chi2-tests with Cramer’s V as the effect size. Comparisons between all three age-groups were performed for 15 items of the CBCL/YSR, since these items are available in all age-versions (see eTable 2, supplementary data) (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014). Standardized residuals and z-tests to compare column proportions were used to locate exact group-differences. Multivariable linear regressions were applied to assess associations between covariates and the summary change-scores of the sub-/syndrome-scales of the CBCL/YSR (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014) as dependent variables. Statistical significance was defined by P-values <0.05 (two-sided).

Results

Sample characteristics

5823 children and adolescents (52.1% female) with a mean age of 7.6 (SD = 4.3) years participated in the study (see Table 1). Mothers answered the parent-reports in 89.1% (n = 4083) of all children. Among preschoolers (1–6y), 7.8% (n = 212) exceeded the clinical cut-off of T ≥ 70 (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014) for affective problems, 4.7% (n = 128) for anxiety and 9.9% (n = 270) for oppositional-defiant problems. In school-children (7–10y), 9.7% (n = 179) scored above T ≥ 70 for anxiety/depression, 4.3% (n = 79) for withdrawn/depression and 9.9% (n = 184) for aggressive problems. In adolescents (11–19y), 9.0% (n = 112) scored above the clinical cut-off for anxiety/depression, 6.5% (n = 81) for withdrawn/depression and 2.0% (n = 25) for aggressive problems.
Table 1.

Descriptive sample characteristics for separate age-groups (N = 5823)

Age group1–6 yearsN = 27267–10 yearsN = 185411–19 yearsN = 1243
Age groups, No. (%)1y: 133 (4.9)7y: 427 (23.0)11y: 164 (13.2)
2y: 310 (11.4)8y: 528 (28.5)12y: 152 (12.2)
3y: 600 (22.0)9y: 492 (26.5)13y: 162 (13.0)
4y: 763 (28.0)10y: 407 (22.0)14y: 177 (14.2)
5y: 569 (20.9) 15y: 165 (13.3)
6y: 351 (12.9) 16y: 200 (16.1)
  17y: 111 (8.9)
  18y: 78 (6.3)19y: 34 (2.7)
Country, No. (%)   
 Switzerland/Liechtenstein1064 (39.0)790 (42.6)619 (49.8)
 Germany1075 (39.4)447 (24.1)295 (23.7)
 Austria580 (21.3)617 (33.3)329 (26.5)
 Other7 (0.3)····
Child gender, No. (%)   
 Female1355 (49.7)878 (47.4)802 (64.5)
 Male1371 (50.3)975 (52.6)434 (34.9)
 Diversea··1 (0.1)7 (0.6)
Pre-COVID education, No. (%)   
 Attending daycare1143 (41.9)····
 Attending kindergarden1528 (56.1)····
 Attending school····1146 (92.2)
 Apprenticeship····82 (6.6)
 Dropped school/apprenticeship····15 (1.2)
Living with both parents, No. (%)2552 (93.6)1650 (89.0)1000 (80.5)
Maternal education, No. (%)   
 Mandatory school not completed2 (0.1)2 (0.1)··
 Completed mandatory school18 (0.7)13 (0.7)··
 Completed apprenticeship (1–2 years)39 (1.4)37 (2.0)··
 Completed apprenticeship (3–4 years)480 (17.6)441 (23.8)··
 A-level equivalent or college of higher education835 (30.6)617 (33.3)··
 University1352 (49.6)743 (40.1)··
 Not applicable0 (0.0)1 (0.1)··
Paternal education, No. (%)   
 Mandatory school not completed7 (0.3)4 (0.2)··
 Completed mandatory school36 (1.3)29 (1.6)··
 Completed apprenticeship (1–2 years)41 (1.5)37 (2.0)··
 Completed apprenticeship (3–4 years)632 (23.2)531 (28.6)··
 A-level equivalent or college of higher education835 (30.6)592 (31.9)··
 University1175 (43.1)653 (35.2)··
 Not applicable0 (0.0)8 (0.4)··
Parental mental health   
 Depressiveness, PHQ-9, mean (SD)5.12 (4.09)4.44 (3.74)··
 Anxiety, GAD-7, mean (SD)4.41 (3.68)3.96 (3.41)··
Parental worries about COVID-19, No. (%)   
 Not at all worried····233 (18.7)
 Little worried····803 (64.6)
 Very worried····205 (16.5)
 Not applicable····2 (0.2)
Pre-COVID psychological treatment, No. (%)24 (0.9)95 (5.1)120 (9.7)
 Missing····3 (0.2)
Pre-existing child chronic physical disease, No. (%)88 (3.2)110 (5.9)97 (7.8)
Number of pre-COVID significant life events, LES   
 Mean (SD)0.77 (1.03)0.66 (1.04)0.93 (1.18)
 None1413 (51.8)1094 (59.0)592 (47.6)
 One775 (28.4)470 (25.4)359 (28.9)
 Two374 (13.7)178 (9.6)159 (12.8)
 ≥3164 (6.1)112 (6.0)132 (10.7)
 Missing0 (0.0)0 (0.0)1 (0.1)
Exposure to COVID-19, mean (SD)0.65 (0.61)1.08 (0.49)1.24 (0.62)
Appraisal   
 Understand yes, No. (%)1392 (51.1)1779 (96.0)1159 (93.2)
 Negative consequences, Cronbach’s alpha, No. (%)α = 0.72α = 0.64α = 0.63
 Summary score: 01699 (62.3)1054 (56.9)467 (37.6)
 Summary score: 1550 (20.2)486 (26.2)336 (27.0)
 Summary score: 2230 (8.4)174 (9.4)246 (19.8)
 Summary score: 3247 (9.1)140 (7.6)194 (15.6)
Internal Control, No. (%)   
 Not at all control····94 (7.6)
 Little control····641 (51.6)
 Very much control····508 (40.9)
Coping self-efficacy, No. (%)   
 Not at all confident····34 (2.7)
 Little confident····406 (32.7)
 Very confident····803 (64.6)
Emotionally overwhelmed, No. (%)   
 Not at all····543 (43.7)
 Little overwhelmed····558 (44.9)
 Very overwhelmed····142 (11.4)
Changes in emotional and behavioural problemsc, CBCL/YSR
 Changes in affective problems, mean (SD), range, Cronbach’s alpha1.00 (2.27),–10.00 to 10.00,α = 0.73····
 Changes in anxiety problems, mean (SD), range,Cronbach’s alpha1.15 (2.29),–10.00 to 10.00,α = 0.79····
 Changes in oppositional-def. problems, mean (SD), range,Cronbach’s alpha1.73 (2.47),–6.00 to 6.00,α = 0.89····
 Changes in anxiety/depression, mean (SD), range,Cronbach’s alpha··0.46 (3.14),–13.00 to 13.00,α = 0.870.14 (3.72),–13.00 to 13.00,α = 0.87
 Changes in withdrawn/depression, mean (SD), range,Cronbach’s alpha··0.24 (2.02),–8.00 to 8.00,α = 0.84−0.05 (2.48),–8.00 to 8.00,α = 0.81
 Changes in aggressive problems, mean (SD), range,Cronbach’s alpha··1.27 (4.83),–18.00 to 18.00,α = 0.92−0.71 (4.89),–17.00 to 17.00,α = 0.93

Note. ‘··’ indicates this item was not assessed in this study; a for calculation of T-scores mean score of the respective T-score for males and female was formed; binary gender (male/female) was used in regression analysis; b summary score comprised 7 items in the child-versions and 6 items in the adolescent-version; c raw summary-scores were calculated for each sub-/syndrome scale by summing the change-score of each corresponding item rated as decrease (score: −1), equal (score: 0), or increase (score: 1). Abbreviations: CBCL, Child Behaviour Checklist (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014); GAD-7 (Spitzer et al., 2006), Scale for General Anxiety Disorder; LES (Landolt & Vollrath, 1998), Life Event Scale; NA, not applicable to this age-group; PHQ-9 (Kroenke et al., 2001), Patient Health Questionnaire-9; YSR (Döpfner et al., 2014), Youth Self-Report.

Descriptive sample characteristics for separate age-groups (N = 5823) Note. ‘··’ indicates this item was not assessed in this study; a for calculation of T-scores mean score of the respective T-score for males and female was formed; binary gender (male/female) was used in regression analysis; b summary score comprised 7 items in the child-versions and 6 items in the adolescent-version; c raw summary-scores were calculated for each sub-/syndrome scale by summing the change-score of each corresponding item rated as decrease (score: −1), equal (score: 0), or increase (score: 1). Abbreviations: CBCL, Child Behaviour Checklist (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014); GAD-7 (Spitzer et al., 2006), Scale for General Anxiety Disorder; LES (Landolt & Vollrath, 1998), Life Event Scale; NA, not applicable to this age-group; PHQ-9 (Kroenke et al., 2001), Patient Health Questionnaire-9; YSR (Döpfner et al., 2014), Youth Self-Report.

Changes in emotional and behavioural problems

Figure 1 depicts the frequencies of changes in the sub-/syndrome-scales of the CBCL/YSR (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014). Between 15.3% and 43.0% of the participants reported an increase in problems during the COVID-19 pandemic. A detailed overview of changes on item-level for seven age groups is provided in eTable 2, supplementary data. Across all age-groups, being defiant and arguing was most consistently reported to have increased. In preschoolers, all oppositional symptoms (except: being uncooperative in 1–3y), crying, sleeping problems, clinging, sadness (4–6y), not sleeping alone (4–6y), and being upset by separation (1–3y) have consistently increased in more than 20% of the sample. In school-children (7–10y), an increase in being stubborn, mood changes, sulking, demanding attention, being nervous, and crying (7–8y) was most frequently reported (>20% of the sample). Adolescents consistently experienced an increase in nervousness (>20%). Those aged between 14–19 years also reported heightened levels of worries, overtiredness, underactivity, sadness and mood changes (>20%). Only adolescents aged 17–19 years, frequently (>20%) experienced an increase of fears about school and crying.
Figure 1.

Changes in summary scores in emotional and behavioral problems for separate age-groups

Changes in summary scores in emotional and behavioral problems for separate age-groups

Age-related effects on changes in emotional and behavioural problems

Significant differences between the three age-groups (1–6y, 7–10y, 11–19y) were found for changes in all 15 emotional and behavioural problems with small effect-sizes and a moderate effect-size (Cohen, 1988) for being disobedient (see Table 2). The increase of crying, sleeping problems/nightmares and all oppositional-defiant behaviours was significantly largest in preschoolers compared to school-children and adolescents. School-children were significantly more fearful than preschoolers and adolescents but showed a moderate increase in several emotional and behavioural problems. Up to 26.9% of adolescents reported an increase of problems (see Figure 1) that was highest in worries, being overtired, underactive and nervous compared to younger age-groups (see Table 2). Up to 15.9% of adolescents showed a decrease in problems and reported this significantly more frequently than preschool- and school-children in all but one of the 15 emotional and behavioural problems.
Table 2.

Age-related changes in emotional and behavioural problems since Corona-pandemic

 Age-group
 
CBCL/YSR item(footnote: item number of CBCL1.5–5, CBCL6-18 R, YSR11-18 R);1–6 years(N = 2726)7–10 years(N = 1854)11–19 years(N = 1243)χ2(df)P-value (95% CI), Cramer’s V
Cries a lot13, 14, 14    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value134a (4.9%)–2.792a (5.0%)–2.1134b (10.8%)6.5χ2(4) = 87.78, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.09
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1913a (70.2%)–1.11363b (73.5%)0.8911a,b (73.3%)0.6
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value679a (24.9%)3.3399b (21.5%)–0.4198c (15.9%)–4.5
Trouble sleeping38,100,100    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value114a (4.2%)–2.9102a (5.5%)0.1102b (8.2%)4.1χ2(4) = 89.10, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.09
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1900a (69.7%)–1.91453b (78.4%)2.8887a (71.4%)-0.6
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value712a (26.1%)4.9299b (16.1%)–5.2254c (20.4%)–1.0
Overtired50,54,54    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value171a (6.3%)–1.696a (5.2%)–3.1147b (11.8%)6.2χ2(4) = 321.90, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.17
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2254a (82.7%)0.21699b (91.6%)4.4838c (67.4%)–5.8
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value301a (11.0%)0.759b (3.2%)–9.8258c (20.8%)11.0
Little interest71, enjoys little5,5    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value108a (4.0%)–4.1100a (5.4%)–0.8132b (10.6%)7 · 0χ2(4) = 97.80, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.09
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2397a (87.9%)2.01564b (84.4%)0.0957c (77.0%)–2.9
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value221a (8.1%)–2.7190b (10.2%)0.8154b (12.4%)3.0 
Underactive89,102,102    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value126a (4.6%)–3.690a (4.9%)–2.6155b (12.5%)8.5χ2(4) = 163.02, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.12
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2300a (84.4%)2.81487b (80.2%)0.3849c (68.3%)–4.5
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z -value300a (11.0%)–4.2277b (14.9%)1.1239c (19.2%)4.9
Sad90,103,103    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value98a (3.6%)–3.9100b (5.4%)0.1112c (9.0%)5.6χ2(4) = 50.23, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.07
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2059a (75.5%)0.61390a, b (75.0%)0.2888b (71.4%)–1.2
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value569a (20.9%)0.8364a (19.6%)–0.5243a (19.5%)–0.5
Fears32,29,29    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value73a (2.7%)–5.181b (4.4%)–0.9128c (10.3%)8.7χ2(4) = 123.39, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.10
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2485a (91.2%)1.71640b (88.5%)0.21004 c (80.8%)–2.7
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value168a (6.2%)–1.8133a, b (7.2%)0.2111b (8.9%)2.5
Nervous47,45,45    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value79a (2.9%)–6.3137b (7.4%)2.8122b (9.8%)5.9χ2(4) = 294.46, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.16
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2252a (82.6%)5.91273b (68.7%)–2.1721c (58.0%)–6.2
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value395a (14.5%)–7.7444b (23.9%)2.5400c (32.2%)8.3
Nightmares48,47,47    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value71a (2.6%)–5.491b (4.9%)0.1122c (9.8%)7.9χ2(4) = 118.94, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.10
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2273a, b (83.4%)–0.11586b (85.5%)0.91005a (80.9%)–1.0
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value382a (14.0%)3.7177b (9.5%)–2.6116b (9.3%)–2.3
Fearful87,50,50    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value70a (2.6%)–5.8104b (5.6%)1.1120c (9.7%)7.2χ2(4) = 109.22, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.10
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2452a (89.9%)1.71560b (84.1%)–1.21045b (84.1%)–1.0
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z -value204a (7.5%)–1.1190b (10.2%)3.278a (6.3%)–2.3
Worries99,112,112    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value57a (2.1%)–5.489b (4.8%)1.398c (7.9%)6.4χ2(4) = 163.59, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.12
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value2290a (84.0%)3.11464b (79.0%)0.1835c (67.2%)–4.6
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value379a (13.9%)–3.9301a (16.2%)–0.8310b (24.9%)6.8
Defiant15, argues3,3    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value82a (3.0%)–4.398b (5.3%)0.9101c (8.1%)5.3χ2(4) = 142.74, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.11
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1592a (58.4%)–2.81182b (63.8%)0.6871c (70.1%)3.3
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1052a (38.6%)5.5574b (31.0%)–1.2271c (21.8%)–6.7
Disobedient20, disob. at home22,22    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value65a (2.4%)–5.787b (4.7%)–0.1125c (10.1%)8.6χ2(4) = 500.37, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.21
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1729a (63.4%)–5.71472b (79.4%)3.41031c (82.9%)4.2
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value932a (34.2%)12.8295b (15.9%)–6.087c (7.0%)–11.6 
Stubborn81,86,86    
 Less, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value82a (3.0%)–4.291b (4.9%)0.3104c (8.4%)5.8χ2(4) = 305.30, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.16
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1771a (65.0%)–3.31271b (68.6%)–0.81046c (84.2%)5.9
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value873a (32.0%)7.3492b (26 · 5%)1 · 393c (7.5%)–12.4
Temper tantrums85,95,95    
 Less, No. (%)Standardized residual, Z-value92a (3.4%)-4.799b (5.3%)–0.2127c (10.2%)7.2χ2(4) = 244.79, P < 0.001 (0.000; 0.000), V = 0.15
 Equal, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value1776a (65.2%)–3.61411b (76.1%)2.6949b (76.3%)2.2
 More, No. (%) Standardized residual, Z-value858a (31.5%)8.6344b (18.6%)–4.4167c (13.4%)–7.3

Note. Standardized residuals are the difference between the expected and the observed frequencies divided by the square root of the expected frequencies. Standardized residuals are significant at P < 0.05 for Z>|1.96|, at P < 0.01 for Z>|2.58|, at P < 0.001 for Z>|3.29|; different subscripts a, b, and c indicate significant differences at P < 0.05 for comparison of column frequencies between age-groups; Cramer’s V (df* = 2) is small for V = 0.07 and moderate for V = 0.21 (Cohen, 1988)29. Abbreviations: CBCL (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014), Child Behaviour Checklist; YSR (Döpfner et al., 2014), Youth Self-Report.

Age-related changes in emotional and behavioural problems since Corona-pandemic Note. Standardized residuals are the difference between the expected and the observed frequencies divided by the square root of the expected frequencies. Standardized residuals are significant at P < 0.05 for Z>|1.96|, at P < 0.01 for Z>|2.58|, at P < 0.001 for Z>|3.29|; different subscripts a, b, and c indicate significant differences at P < 0.05 for comparison of column frequencies between age-groups; Cramer’s V (df* = 2) is small for V = 0.07 and moderate for V = 0.21 (Cohen, 1988)29. Abbreviations: CBCL (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014), Child Behaviour Checklist; YSR (Döpfner et al., 2014), Youth Self-Report.

Predictors of changes in emotional and behavioural problems

Results of multivariable regression analysis are shown in Table 3. All regression models were significant with the explained variance between 3.0% in adolescents and 19.0% in preschoolers. Regarding socio-demographic variables, being older was significantly associated with an increase in affective and oppositional-defiant behaviours in preschoolers and in withdrawn/depression problems in school-children. Males were significantly more likely to experience an increase in oppositional-defiant/aggressive problems in both preschool- and school-children than females. Living together with both parents was associated with higher levels of all types of problems in preschoolers and more depression/anxiety in school-children. Higher parental education assessed in children only was significantly related to an increase in anxiety in preschoolers and anxiety/depression as well as withdrawn/depression in school-children. Socio-demographic variables were not significantly associated with any outcome-domain in adolescents.
Table 3.

Predictors of changes in emotional and behavioural problems in separate age-groups (multivariate linear regression analyses)

 BSEBβCI (95%)PBSEBβCI (95%)PBSEBβCI (95%)P
Age-group preschoolers: 1–6 years (N = 2726)
 
Increase in affective problems
Increase in anxiety problems
Increase in oppositional-defiant problems
Sociodemo-graphics               
Child age0.090.040.050.02; 0.160.0100.030.040.02−0.04; 0.100.3590.140.040.080.07; 0.21<0.001
Child female gender−0.070.08−0.02−0.23; 0.090.380−0.110.08−0.02−0.26; 0.050.184−0.390.09−0.08−0.56; −0.22<0.001
Living with both parents0.410.160.050.09; 0.740.0120.430.170.050.10; 0.750.0110.360.180.040.02; 0.710.040
Parental education0.020.030.01−0.04; 0.070.5620.080.030.060.03; 0.140.0020.000.030.00−0.05; 0.060.954
Pre-existing variables               
Child in psychotherapy0.250.430.01−0.59; 1.080.566−0.070.43−0.00−0.91; 0.770.8700.350.460.01−0.54; 1.250.443
Chronic physical disease−0.250.23−0.02−0.69; 0.190.261−0.320.23−0.03−0.76; 0.130.1630.080.240.01−0.40; 0.550.747
Family life events, LES sum score−0.060.04−0.03−0.13; 0.020.145−0.010.04−0.00−0.09; 0.070.820−0.030.04−0.01−0.11; 0.050.511
COVID-19 exposure0.110.070.03−0.03; 0.240.114−0.030.07−0.01−0.16; 0.110.7170.080.070.02−0.07; 0.220.296
Appraisal               
Understanding0.010.090.00−.17; 0.190.9370.070.090.02−0.12; 0.250.469−0.020.10−0.00−0.21; 0.180.860
Negative consequences0.460.050.200.37; 0.55<0.0010.410.050.170.32; 0.50<0.0010.530.050.210.44; 0.63<0.001
Parental mental health               
PHQ-9 sum score0.130.020.230.10; 0.16<0.0010.100.020.180.07; 0.13<0.0010.120.020.190.08; 0.15<0.001
GAD-7 sum score0.050.020.080.02; 0.080.0030.100.020.160.07; 0.13<0.0010.080.020.120.05; 0.12<0.001
F (df)49.70 (12)    49.11 (12)    55.65 (12)    
R2 adj.0.18    0.18    0.19    
P
<0.001
 
 
 
 
<0.001
 
 
 
 
<0.001
 
 
 
 
Age-group school-children: 7–10 years (N = 1854)
 
Increase of anxiety/depression
Increase of withdrawn/depression
Increase of aggressive problems
Sociodemo-graphics               
Child age0.120.070.04−0.01; 0.240.0780.110.040.060.03; 0.190.0100.050.100.01−0.14; 0.250.594
Child female gender−0.140.14−0.02−0.42; 0.130.311−0.070.09−0.02−0.25; 0.110.426−0.490.21−0.05−0.91; −0.070.022
Living with both parents0.510.230.050.06; 0.960.0250.180.150.03−0.11; 0.470.2280.680.350.04−0.01; 1.360.054
Parental education0.110.050.060.02; 0.200.0140.080.030.060.02; 0.130.0090.110.070.04−0.03; 0.240.122
Pre-existing variables               
Child in psychotherapy−0.820.32−0.06−1.46; −0.190.011−0.710.21−0.08−1.12; −0.290.001−0.740.50−0.03−1.72; 0.230.133
Chronic physical disease−0.130.30−0.01−0.71; 0.460.668−0.100.19−0.01−0.48; 0.290.624−0.520.46−0.03−1.41; 0.380.258
Family life events, LES sum score−0.010.070.00−0.15; 0.120.8450.010.040.01−0.07; 0.100.7760.050.100.01−0.15; 0.260.629
COVID-19 exposure0.080.140.01−0.20; 0.370.5610.080.090.02−0.11; 0.260.424−0.030.22−0.00−0.47; 0.400.882
Appraisal               
Understanding−0.500.35−0.03−1.19; 0.200.1610.080.230.01−0.37; 0.540.718−0.840.54−0.03−1.90; 0.230.123
Negative consequences0.510.080.150.35; 0.67<0.0010.250.050.110.14; 0.35<0.0010.620.130.120.37; 0.87<0.001
Parental mental health               
PHQ-9 sum score0.090.030.110.03; 0.150.0020.070.020.140.04; 0.11<0.0010.210.040.160.12; 0.30<0.001
GAD-7 sum score0.120.030.130.06; 0.19<0.0010.050.020.080.01; 0.090.0280.170.050.120.07; 0.260.001
F (df)18.03 (12)    12.95 (12)    19.40 (12)    
R2 adj.0.10    0.07    0.11    
P<0.001    <0.001    <0.001    
 
Age-group adolescents: 11–19 years (N = 1243)
 
Increase of anxiety/depression
Increase of withdrawn/depression
Increase of aggressive problems
Sociodemo-graphics               
Child age0.040.050.03−0.05; 0.140.3650.040.030.04−0.02; 0.100.2160.030.060.01−0.10; 0.160.635
Child female gender0.250.220.03−0.18; 0.670.2510.060.150.01−0.22; 0.350.6570.190.300.02−0.39; 0.770.524
Living with both parents−0.200.26−0.02−0.71; 0.310.437−0.200.17−0.03−0.54; 0.140.257−0.530.36−0.04−1.23–0.170.135
Pre-existing variables               
Adolescent in psychotherapy1.010.360.080.27; 1.680.0050.460.240.06−0.01; 0.940.054−0.380.49−0.02−1.34; 0.580.438
Chronic physical disease0.530.380.04−0.22; 1.280.166−0.150.26−0.02−0.65; 0.350.5570.730.520.04−0.29; 1.760.161
Family life events, LES sum score−0.110.09−0.03−0.29; 0.070.236−0.080.06−0.04−0.19; 0.040.207−0.180.12−0.04−0.42; 0.060.138
COVID-19 exposure−0.300.17−0.05−0.63; 0.030.070−0.250.11−0.06−0.47; −0.030.027−0.600.23−0.08−1.05; −0.150.009
Appraisal               
Understanding0.110.410.01−0.70; 0.930.7830.320.280.03−0.22; 0.8640.2450.550.570.03−0.56; 1.670.334
Internal control0.120.180.02−0.23; 0.470.4920.020.120.01−0.21; 0.260.8400.130.240.02−0.34; 0.610.581
Coping self-efficacy−0.510.22−0.070.94; −0.090.018−0.450.15−0.10−0.74; −0.170.002−0.380.30−0.04−0.96; 0.210.205
Emotional overwhelmment0.860.170.160.52; 1.20<0.0010.420.120.120.20; 0.65<0.0010.140.240.02−0.32; 0.610.546
Negative consequences0.580.100.170.38; 0.77<0.0010.440.070.190.30; 0.57<0.0010.690.140.160.42; 0.97<0.001
Parental mental health               
Worry of parents0.050.180.01−0.30; 0.410.776−0.120.12−0.03−0.35; 0.120.336−0.410.25−0.05−0.89; 0.080.104
F (df)11.98 (13)    10.66 (13)    3.69 (13)    
R2 adj.0.10    0.09    0.03    
P<0.001    <0.001    <0.001    

Bold letters indicate P < 0.05. Abbreviations: GAD-7 (Spitzer et al., 2006), Scale for General Anxiety Disorder; LES (Landolt & Vollrath, 1998), Life Event Scale; PHQ-9 (Kroenke et al., 2001), Patient Health Questionnaire-9.

Predictors of changes in emotional and behavioural problems in separate age-groups (multivariate linear regression analyses) Bold letters indicate P < 0.05. Abbreviations: GAD-7 (Spitzer et al., 2006), Scale for General Anxiety Disorder; LES (Landolt & Vollrath, 1998), Life Event Scale; PHQ-9 (Kroenke et al., 2001), Patient Health Questionnaire-9. In terms of pre-existing characteristics, attending psychotherapy before COVID-19 was associated with a decrease in anxiety/depression and withdrawn/depression problems in school-children but had no significant association in preschoolers. In adolescence, the opposite effect was found with regard to anxiety/depression. Exposure to COVID-19 was significantly associated with a decrease in withdrawn/depression and aggressive behaviours in adolescents but not in children. The presence of chronic physical disease and the number of life events in the previous 6 months were not significantly associated with any outcome-domain and in any age-group. With regard to appraisal, perceived negative consequences were significantly associated with higher problem-levels in all age-groups and outcomes while the degree of understanding had no significant association in any age-group. In adolescents, being confident to be able to efficiently cope with the pandemic was associated with less anxiety/depression and withdrawn/depression while feeling emotionally overwhelmed due to COVID-19 had the opposite effect. In preschoolers and school-children, poor mental health of the parent was associated with an increase in all outcomes while the degree of parental worrying had no significant effect on adolescents.

Discussion

This is the first international study that investigates the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on emotional and behavioural problems in a large sample of children and adolescents aged between 1 and 19 years. Between 15.3% and 43.0% of the participants reported an increase in problems during COVID-19. Effects differed related to age, gender, exposure to and appraisal of COVID-19, having attended psychotherapy before COVID-19 and parental mental health. Between 2.0% and 9.9% of the 1–19 year olds reported emotional and behavioural problems above the clinical cut-off. Preschoolers aged 1–6 years had clinically relevant mental health problems in 4.7% (anxiety), 7.8% (affective problems) and 9.9% (oppositional-defiant problems) of the sample; school-children aged 7–10 years in 4.3% (withdrawn/depression), 9.7% (anxiety/depression) and 9.9% (aggressive problems); adolescents aged 11–19 years in 4.3% (withdrawn/depression), 9.7% (anxiety/depression), and 2.0% (aggressive problems). With the exception of aggressive behaviours in adolescents, these frequencies are around 2 to 5 times higher than the expected prevalence of 2.0% (T > 70) in the general population (Achenbach & Rescorla, 2000; Döpfner et al., 2014). This suggests that in a substantial proportion of children and adolescents the COVID-19 pandemic leads to mental health problems. This conclusion is supported by previous studies (Buzzi et al., 2020; Jiao et al., 2020; Saurabh & Ranjan, 2020; Xie et al., 2020; Zhou et al., 2020) and our finding that between 15.3% and 43.0% of all participants reported an increase in problems during the major COVID-19 lockdown measures. However, the comparability to our study is limited as in German-speaking countries only partial lockdown measures have been applied at the time of baseline-recruitment (e.g. it was always possible to leave home) which is known to have less detrimental effects (Saurabh & Ranjan, 2020; Xie et al., 2020). This may also explain why in contrast to some other studies (Xie et al., 2020; Zhou et al., 2020) we did not find an effect of exposure to COVID-19 in preschoolers and school-children. Importantly, the reaction to the COVID-19 pandemic in terms of the type of problem and frequency differed significantly between age-groups. Parents of preschoolers reported the largest increase in oppositional-defiant behaviours while adolescents showed the largest increase in emotional problems. School-children had a profile with only moderate increase in both behavioural and emotional problems. The reason for this difference between age-groups may be that the reaction to a stressor, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, is developmentally determined. Several emotional problems require cognitive skills that may not be (fully) acquired in (younger) children. For example, worrying is based on the capacity to anticipate, mentally represent, and reason about future catastrophic events, which typically improves during childhood and gets most influential on functioning at age 13 (Grist & Field, 2012). Accordingly, the frequency of worrying increased from preschoolers to school-children to adolescents in our study. Moreover, several characteristic features of adolescence (e.g. high rates of negative affectivity and reactivity, low self-esteem) are known to confer specific risk at this age for the development of emotional problems as part of anxiety and depression (Rapee et al., 2019). In line with this, emotional problems had the largest increase among adolescents in our study. Notably, these results need to be interpreted in the light of potential reporter-effects (i.e. we used parent-reports for children and self-reports for adolescents) as there is robust evidence for cross-informant discrepancies between parent- and adolescent self-reported mental health problems (De Los Reyes et al., 2015; Rescorla et al., 2013). Parents are supposed to report less internalizing problems due to their limited insight into their child’s feelings while they may report at least as many externalizing problems as their child because such behaviours are directly observable (Achenbach, McConaughy, & Howell, 1987; De Los Reyes et al., 2015). This may explain why we detected more externalizing problems in children and more internalizing problems in adolescents. However, there is evidence that parent- and self-reports of adolescents tend to rate the same items as low, medium or high, which contradicts substantial disagreement about the problem-type (Hamblin et al., 2016; Rescorla et al., 2013). Given that problem-scores are generally higher in self- than in parent-reports (Rescorla et al., 2013), parents might have under-reported their children’s mental health problems in this study, in particular internalizing problems. Nevertheless, in line with our results very young children tend to react to adverse and traumatic events predominantly with dysregulated, externalizing behaviours rather than with internalizing problems due to their limited cognitive abilities (Kertz & Woodruff-Borden, 2011; Scheeringa, Zeanah, Myers, & Putnam, 2003; Straussner & Calnan, 2014). Accordingly, similar age-effects on the type of mental health problems of children aged 1–19 years during COVID-19 were also found in a study using parental reports only for qualitative thematic analyses (Fitzpatrick, Carson, & Weisz, 2020), thus supporting our results. Interestingly, adolescents reported on average a significantly larger decrease in both emotional and behavioural problems than preschool- and school-children using parental report. This may be due to the higher prevalence of mental disorders in adolescence compared to childhood (Dalsgaard, Thorsteinsson, & Trabjerg, 2020), which leaves more room for improvement. Given that adolescents are more salient to peer-rejection than any other age-group (Rapee et al., 2019), some may have experienced the physical distancing measures as relieving because of less negative peer-interactions and social comparisons. Alternatively, while younger children strongly rely on their parents’ reaction to the crisis, adolescents may have dealt with the challenges during the pandemic successfully with a positive impact on their self-efficacy and mental health (Fegert et al., 2020). Several risk and protective factors could be identified. Increasing age was significantly associated with an increase in oppositional-defiant behaviours in preschoolers and with withdrawn/depression in school-children. Being male was associated with a higher risk of oppositional-defiant and aggressive problems in preschool- and school-children. This further supports our finding of age-related reactions to COVID-19 and is in line with evidence that the incidence of oppositional-defiant and conduct disorders is higher in boys and peaks at 8 years of age while depressive symptoms begin to increase during late childhood (Dalsgaard et al., 2020). Reporter-differences should be kept in mind when interpreting these results as there is some evidence that parents tend to report higher problem scores for boys than for girls despite the absence of such gender-differences in self-reports (Van Roy, Groholt, Heyerdahl, & Clench-Aas, 2010). Living together with both parents was significantly associated with an increase in anxiety and depression in preschoolers and school-children but not in adolescents. This may be due to new or enhanced partnership problems and confinement-related distress, as it has been found after other life-events, with a negative impact on mental health in the whole family system (Prime, Wade, & Browne, 2020; Weijers, Steensel, & Bögels, 2018). This is supported by recent findings that during the COVID-19 pandemic parent-reported mental health problems in children were positively associated with the number of family members in the home (Fitzpatrick et al., 2020). The relevance of parental behaviour on the child`s mental health is also reflected by our result that negative parental appraisal of the pandemic and poor parental mental health had the most consistent effect in preschoolers and school-children across all outcomes. The lack of an effect of all parental variables in adolescents suggests that younger children may be especially prone to the negative reaction of their parents, possibly due to their limited understanding of the pandemic, which was most pronounced in preschoolers in our study. Alternatively, results might have been affected by reporter-differences because parents’ own distress and symptoms are known to influence their perception of their child’s distress and symptoms (Kassam-Adams, García-España, Miller, & Winston, 2006; Russell et al., 2020). One explanation for this effect may be that parents with high levels of distress or mental health problems recall more negative information about their child`s mental health from their memory than other informants. Additionally, they have a lower threshold by which they gauge whether their child’s behaviour is problematic (De Los Reyes & Kazdin, 2004). This may lead to an increased association of child and parental mental health problems. Nevertheless, most studies could demonstrate that parental reports on child behaviours are still quite accurate and valid despite being influenced by parental psychopathology (Querido, Eyberg, & Boggs, 2001). Higher parental education was associated with more emotional problems in children. One reason may be that higher parental education was found to be related to more parental distress, possibly because of greater perceived difficulties in combining responsibility for paid work and child-care during COVID-19 (Craig, 2006; Qiu et al., 2020). This may have exerted a negative impact on the child’s mental health (Russell et al., 2020). Alternatively, some studies reported that higher parental education was linked to less open communication about a life event with the affected child and subsequently to more mental health problems (Dalton et al., 2020, 2019). Another explanation may be that during the early stage of the pandemic families with lower parental education, who are more likely economically at risk, might have had other worries in addition to their child’s mental health. Having received psychotherapy, an indicator of existing mental health problems before COVID-19, was associated with a decrease in emotional problems in school-children but with an increase in adolescents. The result for adolescents is well in line with the literature (Fegert et al., 2020): Individuals with existing mental health problems are known to have limited coping skills and tend to overly use maladaptive emotions-regulation strategies (Compas et al., 2017). Therefore, exposure to stressors (e.g. home-schooling, loss of direct contact to friends, political news) triggers excessive worries and existing mental health problems (Caporino, Exley, & Latzman, 2020; Hartman, Rommelse, van der Klugt, Wanders, & Timmerman, 2019). In contrast to childhood, adolescence is a time-period with increasing relevance of peers relative to the family (Rapee et al., 2019). Therefore, reduction of peer interactions and social support may have led to a loss of protection against social-emotional distress and thereby to an exacerbation of previous mental health problems. Interestingly, the opposite direction of this effect was found in school-children. This suggests that children might have perceived and appraised changes in their everyday life due to COVID-19 measures, such as limited peer contact and home-schooling, as not stressful and/or as manageable. Spending time with the family and mastering challenges together may have led to increased family cohesion, self-efficacy and social support, which are protective factors in the face of stressors and positively related to mental health (Groth et al., 2019; Schultze-Lutter, Schimmelmann, & Schmidt, 2016). The severity of exposure to COVID-19 was associated with lower levels of withdrawn/depression and aggressive behaviour in adolescents. Such a beneficial effect of increased exposure to COVID-19 was also found in other studies including adolescent samples (Buzzi et al., 2020), probably due to the relief of stressful situations related to school closure, which was the most frequent exposure-experience in our study. Dealing with the virus directly may have reduced uncertainty in terms of fear of the unknown and may have enabled mastery-experiences leading to better mental health (Janssen et al., 2020; Schultze-Lutter et al., 2016).

Limitations

Limitations of this study include the cross-sectional design, which impedes any causal conclusions. However, we did not only assess current problem-levels but also changes experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Further, since our survey was conducted during the period with major lockdown measures, the risk of a recall-bias was minimized. With regard to recruitment, our sample is a non-probability sample. This increases the risk for a self-selection bias. Our sample may thereby underrepresent the most vulnerable groups (e.g. deprived children or migrants, families with low socio-economic status and education level), which limits the generalizability of findings. Another limitation is the rather small amount of explained variance in the regression models, in particular in the older age-groups. This may be due to the fact that several covariates were parent-variables, which might be most influential in the younger age-groups. Therefore, additional variables of special relevance for school-children and adolescents should be integrated in future prediction-models. On an individual level, these may include peer relationships, self-concept/self-efficacy, coping and emotion regulation skills, healthy living style, temperament and personality; on an environmental level, social and peer support, neighbourhood cohesion and socio-economic status (Fritz, de Graaff, Caisley, van Harmelen, & Wilkinson, 2018; Schultze-Lutter et al., 2016). Moreover, the use of caregiver-reports for children and self-reports for adolescents may have exerted an effect on the type and frequency of reported problems (Rescorla et al., 2013). Therefore, the usage of a multi-informant approach (De Los Reyes et al., 2015) and more age-adapted self-reports would be promising to better capture the child`s perspective. However, by now these well-established proxy measures are the only alternative for a mental health assessment at large scales in young children due to their lack of cognitive capacity to understand the response categories, to recall specific examples and to self-reflect on their own behaviours (Cleridou, Patalay, & Martin, 2017; Poulain et al., 2020). Future studies would also benefit from the validation of the self-generated exposure- and appraisal-items as well as the usage of change-scores of the CBCL-scales. Although the self-generated items were developed thoughtfully based on the conceptual definitions of the underlying core constructs, their psychometric quality might be in need of improvement. Therefore, the results of the regression analyses need to be interpreted cautiously and provide only some first insights into psychological factors that might be relevant to deal with the COVID-19 pandemic. Because of the significant developmental differences within each age-groups (e.g. between 1 and 6 years) and in our total sample, we cannot exclude that the detected differences in emotional and behavioural symptoms are strongly influenced by developmental differences in cognitive, emotional and social skills. Therefore, future studies should apply more fine-grained analyses with smaller subgroups using a longitudinal design to disentangle age and developmental effects.

Strengths and implications

Despite these limitations, our study has important strengths (e.g. large international sample, broad age-range to investigate developmental peculiarities, negative and beneficial effects) and implications. Given that children and adolescents react differently related to their developmental stage, age-specific problems should be carefully monitored as it remains unclear if they are just a temporal phenomenon or the starting point or deterioration of a mental disorder. Special support should be offered to the identified risk groups, in particular those adolescents who have been in psychotherapy before and with a negative appraisal style. As adolescents mainly suffer from emotional, that is internalizing problems, their needs may be easily overlooked from the outside. They may especially benefit from interventions to promote coping self-efficacy and emotion regulation skills. In very young children, most emphasis should be put on monitoring and treating dysregulated behaviours (e.g. crying, sleeping problems) and oppositional-defiant problems as early as possible as they are well known to be risk factors for a parent-child spiral of verbal and physical aggression, abuse and stable dysregulated behaviour trajectories across childhood (Barr, Trent, & Cross, 2006; Derella, Burke, Stepp, & Hipwell, 2020; Winsper & Wolke, 2014). To this aim, it seems of utmost importance to decrease parental stress and mental health problems and to enhance positive appraisal and an open communication style about the pandemic. Consequently, public health authorities should provide prevention programmes remotely focusing on parental stress (Ehrensaft, Knous-Westfall, & Alonso, 2016; Richards et al., 2006) and offering information for caregivers how to improve parent-child communication about COVID-19 and its consequences by taking the child’s age and comprehension of illness and causality into account.

Conclusions

In summary, a substantial proportion of children and adolescents experience an exacerbated stress response due to COVID-19 measures. The resulting emotional and behavioural problems should be monitored in a developmentally sensitive way, and support should be offered to specific risk groups. Thereby, the sole focus on physical health should be overcome by including mental health in prevention measures to successfully cope with the short- and long-term effects of the pandemic. Click here for additional data file. Click here for additional data file.
  65 in total

1.  The mediating effect of cognitive development on children's worry elaboration.

Authors:  Rebecca M Grist; Andy P Field
Journal:  J Behav Ther Exp Psychiatry       Date:  2011-11-27

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Journal:  J Sleep Res       Date:  2020-07-27       Impact factor: 3.981

3.  A brief measure for assessing generalized anxiety disorder: the GAD-7.

Authors:  Robert L Spitzer; Kurt Kroenke; Janet B W Williams; Bernd Löwe
Journal:  Arch Intern Med       Date:  2006-05-22

4.  Attitudes and Psychological Factors Associated With News Monitoring, Social Distancing, Disinfecting, and Hoarding Behaviors Among US Adolescents During the Coronavirus Disease 2019 Pandemic.

Authors:  Benjamin Oosterhoff; Cara A Palmer
Journal:  JAMA Pediatr       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 16.193

5.  Does parent-child agreement vary based on presenting problems? Results from a UK clinical sample.

Authors:  Kalia Cleridou; Praveetha Patalay; Peter Martin
Journal:  Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health       Date:  2017-04-19       Impact factor: 3.033

6.  Does the COVID-19 pandemic impact parents' and adolescents' well-being? An EMA-study on daily affect and parenting.

Authors:  Loes H C Janssen; Marie-Louise J Kullberg; Bart Verkuil; Noa van Zwieten; Mirjam C M Wever; Lisanne A E M van Houtum; Wilma G M Wentholt; Bernet M Elzinga
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2020-10-16       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Associations between Psychopathology in Mothers, Fathers and Their Children: A Structural Modeling Approach.

Authors:  D Weijers; F J A van Steensel; S M Bögels
Journal:  J Child Fam Stud       Date:  2018-03-01

8.  What Does Adolescent Substance Use Look Like During the COVID-19 Pandemic? Examining Changes in Frequency, Social Contexts, and Pandemic-Related Predictors.

Authors:  Tara M Dumas; Wendy Ellis; Dana M Litt
Journal:  J Adolesc Health       Date:  2020-07-18       Impact factor: 5.012

Review 9.  Challenges and burden of the Coronavirus 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic for child and adolescent mental health: a narrative review to highlight clinical and research needs in the acute phase and the long return to normality.

Authors:  Jörg M Fegert; Benedetto Vitiello; Paul L Plener; Vera Clemens
Journal:  Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health       Date:  2020-05-12       Impact factor: 3.033

10.  Initial Challenges of Caregiving During COVID-19: Caregiver Burden, Mental Health, and the Parent-Child Relationship.

Authors:  B S Russell; M Hutchison; R Tambling; A J Tomkunas; A L Horton
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2020-10
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1.  Association Between Homeschooling and Adolescent Sleep Duration and Health During COVID-19 Pandemic High School Closures.

Authors:  Joëlle N Albrecht; Helene Werner; Noa Rieger; Natacha Widmer; Daniel Janisch; Reto Huber; Oskar G Jenni
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2.  COVID-19 Unmasked Global Collaboration Protocol: longitudinal cohort study examining mental health of young children and caregivers during the pandemic.

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3.  Impact of the Coronavirus Disease Pandemic on Mental Health among Local Residents in Korea: a Cross Sectional Study.

Authors:  Minsoo Ko; Hye-Mi Cho; Jinsol Park; SuHyuk Chi; Changsu Han; Hyun-Suk Yi; Moon-Soo Lee
Journal:  J Korean Med Sci       Date:  2021-11-29       Impact factor: 2.153

4.  Longitudinal transactional relationships between caregiver and child mental health during the COVID-19 global pandemic.

Authors:  Emily L Robertson; Jennifer Piscitello; Ellyn Schmidt; Carolina Mallar; Bridget Davidson; Ruby Natale
Journal:  Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health       Date:  2021-11-15       Impact factor: 3.033

5.  Understanding the mental health impacts of COVID-19 through a trauma lens.

Authors:  Meaghan L O'Donnell; Talya Greene
Journal:  Eur J Psychotraumatol       Date:  2021-10-29

6.  Sexual assault as a public health problem and other developments in psychotraumatology.

Authors:  Miranda Olff
Journal:  Eur J Psychotraumatol       Date:  2022-03-09

7.  Increase in depression and anxiety disorder diagnoses during the COVID-19 pandemic in children and adolescents followed in pediatric practices in Germany.

Authors:  Karel Kostev; Kerstin Weber; Steffi Riedel-Heller; Christian von Vultée; Jens Bohlken
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8.  Emotional and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder symptoms of preterm vs. full-term children during COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.

Authors:  Marion Bailhache; Maeva Monnier; Flore Moulin; Xavier Thierry; Stéphanie Vandentorren; Sylvana M Côté; Bruno Falissard; Thierry Simeon; Bertrand Geay; Laetitia Marchand; Marie N Dufourg; Marie A Charles; Pierre Y Ancel; Maria Melchior; Alexandra Rouquette; Cédric Galera
Journal:  Pediatr Res       Date:  2022-03-30       Impact factor: 3.756

9.  COVID-19 unmasked: preschool children's negative thoughts and worries during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia.

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Journal:  Eur J Psychotraumatol       Date:  2021-06-28

10.  Parental Perceptions of Child and Adolescent Mental Health During the COVID-19 Pandemic in Argentina.

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