| Literature DB >> 34427834 |
Rebecca N Dudovitz1,2, Shirley Russ1,3, Mary Berghaus1,3, Iheoma U Iruka4, Jessica DiBari5, Dana M Foney5, Michael Kogan5, Neal Halfon6,7,8,9.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Understanding the full impact of COVID-19 on U.S. children, families, and communities is critical to (a) document the scope of the problem, (b) identify solutions to mitigate harm, and (c) build more resilient response systems. We sought to develop a research agenda to understand the short- and long-term mechanisms and impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on children's healthy development, with the goal of devising and ultimately testing interventions to respond to urgent needs and prepare for future pandemics. DESCRIPTION: The Life Course Intervention Research Network facilitated a series of virtual meetings that included members of 10 Maternal and Child Health (MCH) research programs, their research and implementation partners, as well as family and community representatives, to develop an MCH COVID-19 Research Agenda. Stakeholders from academia, clinical practice, nonprofit organizations, and family advocates participated in four meetings, with 30-35 participants at each meeting. ASSESSMENT: Investigating the impacts of COVID-19 on children's mental health and ways to address them emerged as the highest research priority, followed by studying resilience at individual and community levels; identifying and mitigating the disparate negative effects of the pandemic on children and families of color, prioritizing community-based research partnerships, and strengthening local, state and national measurement systems to monitor children's well-being during a national crisis.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Child; Health equity; Mental health; Research co-design
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34427834 PMCID: PMC8383722 DOI: 10.1007/s10995-021-03207-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Matern Child Health J ISSN: 1092-7875
Maternal and Child Health COVID-19 Research Agenda Setting Participants
| Research entity | Institutions |
|---|---|
| Adolescent and Young Adult Health Network (AYAH) | University of California San Francisco |
| Autism Longitudinal Data Project Network (ALDP) | Boston University Johns Hopkins University |
| Autism Transitions Research Project Network (ATRP) | Drexel University Mathematica |
| Bridging the Word Gap Network (BWG-RN) | University of Kansas |
| Developmental Behavioral Pediatrics Research Network (DBPnet) | Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia |
| Healthy Weight Research Network for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder and Other Developmental Disabilities Network (HWRN) | University of Massachusetts |
| Life Course Intervention Research Network (LCIRN) | Brown University School of Public Health Center for the Study of Social Policy Johns Hopkins University Tufts University Turnaround for Children UNC-Chapel Hill University of California Berkeley University of California Los Angeles University of Minnesota University of Puget Sound Vanderbilt University Medical Center, |
| Maternal and Child Health Measurement Research Network (MCH MRN | Rutgers University |
| Pediatric Emergency Care Applied Research Network (PECARN) | Brown University |
| Pediatric Research in Office Settings Network (PROS) | Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia |
| Health Resources and Services Administration, Maternal and Child Health Bureau | N/A |
| Family Voices | N/A |
| National Academies of Science | N/A |
COVID-19-related Threats/Challenges or Supports/Opportunities for Children's Health and Well-being
| Ecosystem level | Threats to children’s health and well-being | Supports/opportunities to foster child resilience to COVID-19 impacts |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | • Challenges for adolescents interacting with peers/ romantic relationships • Challenges interacting with parents working from home- parental preoccupation • Challenges meeting basic needs e.g. food scarcity/ access impacting well-being and behavior • COVID-19 impact could lead to disrupted developmental trajectories affecting health, mental health and wellbeing • Decrease in adolescents’ sense of purpose and belonging • Decreased connectedness to caring adults outside the home • Decreased job prospects for adolescents, increased unemployment • Delayed diagnosis of health and developmental issues • Impact of mask wearing on communication and language acquisition for young children • Increased screen time affecting brain architecture and growth • Increased time on social media with potential for cyber-bullying, negative effects on self-esteem • Potential for stress of the pandemic and secondary changes to negatively impact child and youth mental health in the short term | • Decrease in social anxiety for susceptible children with social distancing and virtual learning • Increased awareness of public health • Increased awareness of the importance of getting health information from reputable sources • Increased interest in building resilience • Parents spending more time with children detecting developmental and behavioral challenges earlier • Some children with Intellectual Development Disorder might be faring better at home, being calmer with fewer behavioral outbursts |
| Family | • Decreased access to non-custodial parents due to restricted movements • Economic stress impacting family well-being and ability to meet basic needs • Increased social isolation of families especially those already isolated due e.g. to parental mental health issues • Lack of contact with grandparents and extended families • Possible increased family discord • Potential for increased domestic violence/intimate partner violence/child maltreatment • Potential for increased parental stress, anxiety, isolation and poor mental health | • Increased focus on building family and child resilience, recognizing the central role of safe and connected relationships leading to the capacity to thrive amid adversity • Increased interest in home cooking and nutritious meal plans • Interest in providing families with additional social, psychological and instrumental supports • Interest in providing supports in new and innovative ways that can be sustained post COVID-19 • Parents and children able to spend more time at home with potential for more positive interactions with and strengthened bonds. Could be a sustained trend if there is an increase in working from home |
| Schools | • Challenges for young children in understanding masking and social distancing • Disruption of special education services for children with IEPs • Lack of data on children’s well-being either in-school or distance learning to guide best practice • Preschools and child -care centers closing due to lack of funds • Schools not able to provide childcare, food, other social services • Challenges to higher-education systems in meeting increased mental health needs of those transitioning to adulthood | • Schools can support psycho-social development and well-being via distance learning • Schools are finding new ways to educate children regardless of location • School districts and some principals and superintendents are recognizing there is a lack of social-emotional learning in schools, resulting in an opportunity to make great changes • Schools open to re-structuring to better meet the holistic needs of students |
| Community | • Collapse of non-profit safety net providers • Decrease in city, county and state revenue could impact social and family services • Impact of loss of community activities such as religious services, concerts, team sports • Increased individualism and loss of social cohesion • Lack of awareness of how to meet the challenges with building relationships, reducing stress, gaining skills leading to a culture of hopelessness • Misinformation about the virus • Potential for increased homelessness • Reduced trust in governments and institutions • Uncertainties over the future workplace and how to prepare for it | • Cities are recognizing the importance of investing in early childhood to support well-being • Increased appreciation for nature/ greenspace and interest in home-based activities e.g. food growing, gardening • Openness to youth engagement/participatory research with benefits both for the youth participants and the community |
| Systems | • Disparities in access to services • Economic recession • Insufficient support for unemployed | • Increased interest in using data to inform practice in health and education • Increased knowledge of the importance of inclusive early childhood programs • Interest in providing services and supports in new and more innovative ways that can be sustained post COVID-19 • Openness to perceiving both the pandemic and racism as public health crises. Rich foundation of conceptual models, research, and new and emerging policy and payment structures that could catalyze lasting positive change • Potential to increase health access for all through telemedicine • Potential to provide sufficient resources to pull people out of spiral of poverty (e.g., basic income, unemployment insurance, health care, etc.) • Willingness to advance virtual and other creative ways to reach families for all services |
Fig. 2The research landscape: prioritizing life stages and ecosystem levels. Early childhood: children and families of color, children and families with special needs (family level); early childhood care, healthcare, other support services (systems level). Adolescence: youth of color, youth with special needs (community level); service systems: schools, healthcare, mental health, other community support services (systems level). Artwork credit: Giselle Chow for Leapfrog Consulting
Overarching Research Questions
| Ecosystem level | Research questions |
|---|---|
| Individual | • What are the long-term physical impacts of COVID-19 on children’s physical health, mental health, and resilience? • What are the mechanisms through which differences in susceptibility to COVID-19 are operating? • How can they be addressed? • What are the long-term impacts of the pandemic response (i.e. shut down of schools, economic collapse, etc.) on children’s mental health and developmental trajectories? • How does COVID-19 affect developmental and life transitions, particularly for adolescents and the transition to adulthood? • How do we promote health and well-being and provide support to children and adolescents? How can we use new technologies for health promotion? • What are the special challenges/risks/opportunities for children with special healthcare needs? • What makes some children more resilient and how do we build resilience against future threats? • How do we engage parents, children and youth in the research process to promote their mental health, sense of self, agency and positive health development and well-being? |
| Family | • How is COVID-19 impacting family functioning and development? How does this differ for special populations, such as immigrant families, those with non-English-speaking parents, and families and caregivers of children with intellectual and developmental disabilities? • What resources do families need to maintain their health and well-being? Are those resources available and equitably distributed? What are the greatest needs/gaps? Do these differ for families of color? If so, why? |
| Community | • What are the impacts of COVID-19 on existing disparities (educational, health, economic, homelessness) and how can we support communities to address disparities and mitigate impacts? • How can communities build resilience and engage youth in identifying and testing interventions? |
| Schools | • What are the short- and long-term impacts of remote learning on children and adolescents, particularly those with special needs/IEPs? • What resources are needed to safely re-open schools and what are the risks and benefits to children and society associated with in-person versus distance learning? • How can we use this opportunity to transform school culture to focus on whole-child development? |
| Systems | • How do we meet/support immediate mental health, physical health, and childcare needs? • How do we build systems that will be more responsive and resilient to future pandemics/other threats? • What strategies might be needed to adjust the federal Medicaid match and advance tiered/bundled payments based on the whole child/family needs considering physical, mental, social and relational health risk? • How can we build or adapt measurement systems to study the impact of the pandemic on children and families? |
Specific Research Questions at the Individual Level
| Physical Health | • COVID-19 Multi-Inflammatory Syndrome in Children (MIS-C) • What are the risk factors for MIS-C? • What are effective treatments for MIS-C? • What are the long-term outcomes for MIS-C? • COVID-19 risk in children • What are the risk and protective factors for the susceptibility and severity of COVID-19? • Are children with pre-existing conditions and children with special health care needs at higher risk for infection or for COVID-19-associated morbidity and mortality? • What are the long-term impacts on children? Does this vary by developmental stage and other child or family characteristics? • What are the effective strategies for mitigating long-term negative impacts of infection on child health and wellbeing? • What are the underlying mechanisms of any racial/ethnic differences in the clinical course of COVID-19? • COVID-19 risk in mothers • Are pregnant women more or less prone to getting COVID-19? • What is the impact on the fetus if the mother contracts COVID-19 at different stages of gestation? • How do infection prevention practices impact babies and mothers (e.g. separation, delayed breastfeeding)? • Physical activity and weight • To what extent has the COVID-19 pandemic given rise to unhealthy weight gain among children? • What impact has the pandemic had on physical fitness in children and adolescents and • how is this related to mental health and social-emotional well-being? Is the impact different for team sports versus individual physical activity? • How has the pandemic impacted the ability of families and caregivers of children with intellectual and developmental disabilities to access opportunities for physical activity and recreation? |
| Mental Health | • How has the pandemic impacted children’s mental health and development? What disparities exist? • How are mental health and neurodevelopmental trajectories (and educational outcomes) impacted by • Social distancing/isolation? • Changes in personal daily routines? • Increased sources of stress? Personal experience of trauma? • Changes in access to mental health services? The use of telemedicine for mental healthcare delivery? |
| Resilience | • What are the components and skills needed to meet crises with resilience and how can we build radical resilience for future environmental and social threats? • Where are children thriving and flourishing despite the challenges and what is different for them in terms of family resilience, community supports, orientation/mindsets about the crisis, variations in existing social and relational risks, etc.? • How can we better measure child, family and community resilience? • How can we foster resilience effectively and reliably? |
| Children with special healthcare needs | • What are the potential risks and/or benefits of full remote learning models for children with ADHD and/or learning disabilities? • What challenges do children with intellectual or developmental disabilities face in engaging in preventive measures (e.g., social distancing, mask wearing)? How has this affected children’s and families’ ability to access opportunities outside of the home? • What is the effectiveness of virtual therapies (behavioral supports, social skills) for children with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)? How has access to services changed and how do these changes impact children’s ability to make developmental gains? |
| Adolescents | • What interventions and policies can best support adolescents and young adults, given the difficulty in engaging in developmentally appropriate behavior? • How can we engage adolescents and young adults (AYAs) in the research? • How can we use new technologies to reach AYAs in ways that promote health (broadly defined)? • What role and impact can adolescent engagement, activation and inclusion in the development and implementation of social and community solutions play in enabling adolescents to not only contribute but to support their adaptive responses that build enduring developmental capabilities? • Has social distancing had a positive or negative impact on risky health behaviors? • What are the long-term educational and vocational impacts on adolescents who have had suboptimal virtual learning experiences? |
Specific Research Questions at the Family Level
| Meeting needs | • What are the top concerns of families of color in relation to the pandemic, and how do they differ from concerns of families of other races/ethnicities? What might this tell us about how our society functions? • How have families' sense of the future changed, and how has that altered parenting behaviors? • What do families think they need and are these resources available but not used or are there new resources needed? • What are the greatest needs for families -are they material, relational? What of the needs are COVID-19 related or just surfaced to our attention due to the crisis? |
| Family functioning | • How has the pandemic changed guardian/dependent relationships? Have the changes been positive or negative? • What are the changes in role development in families? • What are the impacts on family cohesion? |
| Special Concerns | • Among immigrant families and those with limited English proficient parents, is COVID-19 accelerating the process of adultification of children and young adults by requiring them to help navigate new technologies and public health messaging as translators? • How has the pandemic impacted the ability of families and caregivers of children with intellectual and developmental disabilities to provide healthy meals? |
Specific Research Questions at the Community Level
| Disparities | • How might the pandemic broaden disparities between low-income and higher-income families as many communities shift to virtual education models? • What mitigates health disparities during pregnancy and early childhood? |
| Youth/civic engagement | • Can young people be engaged in building back better in a way that promotes their mental health, sense of self, agency and positive health development and well-being? • How can youth voices be engaged to address their policy and system needs during the pandemic? • How has the pandemic shaped civic engagement and what are the impacts of civic engagement on health? |
| Homelessness | • How does the pandemic further affect the ability of youth experiencing homelessness to safely and successfully transition to adulthood? • What can we do to prevent increased homelessness among unaccompanied minors and youth as a result of the pandemic? |
| Community resources | • What role does religious affiliation play in child outcomes post pandemic? • Identify whether and how community investments in early childhood education, anti-poverty programs, affordable housing and other social determinants of health have mitigated the negative impact of COVID-19 and the pandemic response on children and families |
Specific Research Questions at the School Level
| Remote learning | • Strategies • What educational strategies may be associated with better academic and mental health outcomes for adolescents participating in full remote learning models due to COVID-19? • How can schools support psycho-social wellbeing and student engagement via distance learning and what lessons from this experience can be applied long-term to foster relational capacity in schools? • Impacts • What impact has remote learning had on early childhood social behavioral development? How will these impacts affect children and society in the long run? • What is the impact of school disruption on adolescent wellbeing, mental health, social networks, and risky health behaviors? • What can we do to decrease high school drop-out and community college and university disengagement due to the pandemic? |
| Re-opening | • What resources, policies and practices are needed to safely open schools and what are the risks and benefits to children and society associated with in person versus distance learning? • What are the opportunities for schools to open up safely and with much more emphasis on whole-child learning and development? • How can a networked learning and improvement approach be used to optimize the strategies that schools develop and implement to optimize successful reopening? |
| Children with special healthcare needs | • What are the potential risks and/or benefits of full remote learning models for adolescents with ADHD and/or learning disabilities? • What is the effectiveness of virtual therapies (behavioral supports, social skills) for children with ASD and other developmental needs? |
Specific Research Questions at the Systems Level
| Healthcare | • How can we manage the need for mental health services, given the shortage of mental health providers? E.g., how can we better equip primary care providers? What is feasible? • What levers exist in pediatrics now that we can pull to advance high-quality virtual well-child care using existing resources like the Well Visit Planner, etc.? • What is the acceptability of or barriers to telehealth for developmental-behavioral pediatric care of children with ASD, to providers and parents? • What strategies might be needed to adjust the federal Medicaid match and advance tiered/bundled payments based on the whole child/family needs considering physical, mental, social and relational health risk? |
| Childcare | • How has the pandemic impacted childcare and early intervention professionals? What supports do they need to address those needs? |
| Measurement | • How can we conduct more rapid and responsive measurement of the impacts of COVID-19? • What resources can we use to measure collective MCH Network activities addressing COVID-19 and child, family and education intervention and service? • What key metrics are missing at the national, state, local and practice/community level that we can fast track specification and testing for? • How can we collect data from/with/by the people directly involved, including youth? |
Fig. 1Results of research prioritization polling. Criteria for prioritization included (1) High need and impact (defined as (a)) worth pursuing even with high effort because need is high; (b) addresses the multi-dimensional ecosystem in which children reside; and (c) good use of collaborative resources/assets); (2) Inclusive, anti-racist, collaborative methodologies (defined as (a)) high potential to engage disenfranchised communities and produce high-quality data; (b) designed for and with communities most impacted; (c) leverages research as intervention; and (d) high potential for sharing data, expanding projects); (3) Responsive and transformative (defined as (a)) can accelerate the well-being of children; (b) responsive, adaptive, flexible, strategic; and (c) not just for knowledge’s sake, but to respond to/anticipate challenges, build protective factors and resilience, put in place buffering processes); and (4) Balanced (defined as contributing to a balanced national research agenda). Each attendee had up to 6 votes to allocate. Votes could be used more than once for a single area if desired