| Literature DB >> 34069468 |
Sonia Chaabane1, Sathyanarayanan Doraiswamy1, Karima Chaabna1, Ravinder Mamtani1, Sohaila Cheema1.
Abstract
School closures during pandemics raise important concerns for children and adolescents. Our aim is synthesizing available data on the impact of school closure during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic on child and adolescent health globally. We conducted a rapid systematic review by searching PubMed, Embase, and Google Scholar for any study published between January and September 2020. We included a total of ten primary studies. COVID-19-related school closure was associated with a significant decline in the number of hospital admissions and pediatric emergency department visits. However, a number of children and adolescents lost access to school-based healthcare services, special services for children with disabilities, and nutrition programs. A greater risk of widening educational disparities due to lack of support and resources for remote learning were also reported among poorer families and children with disabilities. School closure also contributed to increased anxiety and loneliness in young people and child stress, sadness, frustration, indiscipline, and hyperactivity. The longer the duration of school closure and reduction of daily physical activity, the higher was the predicted increase of Body Mass Index and childhood obesity prevalence. There is a need to identify children and adolescents at higher risk of learning and mental health impairments and support them during school closures.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; child and adolescent health; rapid systematic review; school closure
Year: 2021 PMID: 34069468 PMCID: PMC8159143 DOI: 10.3390/children8050415
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Figure 1PRISMA 2009 flowchart of the systematic review’s inclusion process.
Characteristics of the included primary studies on the impact of school closure on child and adolescent health.
| Publication Country Data Source | Study Design/Analysis | Population Characteristics | Types of Interventions Duration of School Closure | Outcomes | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| An, R., 2020 [ | Microsimulation model | Children in kindergarten class of 2010–2011 ( | Scenario 1: 2-month nationwide school closure (April and May 2020) with COVID-19 vs. 2-months nationwide school closure in April and May 2020 without COVID-19 | Increase in the body mass index z-scores | An increase in the mean BMIz by 0.056 unit |
| Scenario 2: Scenario 1 + 10% reduction in daily physical activity in the summer from June to August | Increase in the body mass index z-scores | An increase in the mean BMIz by 0.084 | |||
| Scenario 3: Scenario 2 + 2-month school closure in September and October; November and December | Increase in the body mass index z-scores | An increase in the mean BMIz by 0.141 units | |||
| Scenario 4: Scenario 3 + 2-month school closure in November and December | Increase in the body mass index z-scores | An increase in the mean BMIz by 0.198 units | |||
| Comparison of the control scenario without the COVID-19 pandemic and the 4 alternative scenarios with COVID-19 | Childhood obesity (BMIz in the 95th percentile or higher in the growth chart) | “Compared to girls and non-Hispanic whites and Asians, the impact of COVID-19 on childhood obesity was modestly larger among boys and non-Hispanic blacks and Hispanics, respectively.” | |||
| Angoulvant, F., 2020 [ | Quasi-experimental time series analysis | 871,543 pediatric emergency department (PED) visits | School closure + lockdown | Number of hospital admissions | “A decrease of −45% in hospital admissions in the period from 1 January 2017 to 17 March 2020 and from 18 March 2020 to 19 April 2020.” |
| number of pediatric emergency department (PED) visits for gastroenteritis, bronchiolitis, common cold, acute otitis media | “A decrease of −68% in the overall number of PEDs visits in the period from 1 January 2017 to 17 March 2020 and from 18 March 2020 to 19 April 2020.” | ||||
| Ijadi-Maghsoodi, R., 2020 [ | Report | Youth and families during the pandemic | School closures in the county | Accessibility to resources | “Teachers expressed concerns about under resourced students facing barriers to accessing virtual learning, heightened student anxiety, and difficulty connecting to students in need, all compounded by a compressed timeline. This includes digital disparities and lack of access to computer technology among families and providers.” |
| Masonbrink, A.R., 2020 [ | Pre-publication Release | All children | School closure | Challenges related to: | “Remote learning presents a challenge for all families, those in poverty are at greater disadvantage and thus at increased risk for widening educational disparities.” |
| Mayurasakorn, K.B., 2020 [ | Expert-viewpoint | Thai children reside in rural areas | School closure + the national school breakfast and lunch programs | Food and learning insecurity | Schools closure during COVID-19 caused two major threads: |
| Snapshot of strategies/challenges Analysis | Convenience sample of 9 school districts that were closed as part of social distancing strategies | School closures | Distance learning | “In a small low-density, rural school district with lower reported instances of COVID-19 at the time of implementation, students were sent home without supplemental education material or clear plans for transitioning to distance learning. | |
| Kılınçel Ş., 2020 [ | Cross-sectional | 745 adolescents aged between 12 and 18 years | School closure and home-quarantine | Risk of anxiety and loneliness | “Closure of schools and home-quarantine during pandemic causes anxiety and loneliness in young people.” |
| Isumi A., 2020 [ | Descriptive study | Children under 20 years | School closure between January 2018 and May 2020 | Impact on suicide rates | “The first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic has not significantly affected suicide rates among children and adolescents during the school closure in Japan.” |
| Baron E.J., 2020 [ | Descriptive study | School staffing for each of the 67 counties in Florida | School closure March to April 2020 | The number of child maltreatment allegations | “A counterfactual distribution of child maltreatment allegations for March and April 2020, the first two months in which Florida schools closed. The actual number of reported allegations was approximately 15,000 less (27%) than expected for these two months.” |
| Di Giorgio E., 2020 [ | Survey | 245 mothers and their pre-school children aged between 2 and 5 years | Closure of schools, individual home confinement, and the related social restrictions from 1st to the 9th of April (after three weeks of confinement) compared to the week before the national lockdown | Mothers and their pre-school children’s behavioral habits (i.e., sleep timing and quality, subjective time experience) and psychological well-being (i.e., emotion regulation, self-regulation capacity). | “Restrictive measures had negative effects on mothers’ and their children’s behavioral and psychological levels, with some differences depending on the mothers working situation.” |
Note: COVID-19: the coronavirus disease 2019; UCLA: University of California, Los Angeles; DCF: Department of Children and Families.