| Literature DB >> 35371484 |
Monique Theberath1, David Bauer1, Weizhi Chen2, Manisha Salinas3, Arya B Mohabbat4, Juan Yang4, Tony Y Chon1, Brent A Bauer1, Dietlind L Wahner-Roedler1.
Abstract
Objective: Mental health problems among children and adolescents are increasingly observed during the outbreak of COVID-19, leading to significant healthcare concerns. Survey studies provide unique opportunities for research during this pandemic, while there are no existing systematic reviews in this setting. The objective was to summarize existing survey studies addressing the effects of the current COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and adolescents.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Child; adolescent; mental health; review; survey
Year: 2022 PMID: 35371484 PMCID: PMC8972920 DOI: 10.1177/20503121221086712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: SAGE Open Med ISSN: 2050-3121
Figure 1.PRISMA flowchart for literature search.
Characteristics of Included trials.
| Author | Year | Country | Design | Ethic approval | Informed consent | N | Population | Age | Mental health condition(s) assessed | Respondent rate | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abawi
| 2020 | Netherlands | Cross-sectional interview | Yes | Yes | 90 | Children and adolescents with severe obesity | 4-18 | Anxiety | 83% | Medium |
| Garcia de Avila
| 2020 | Brazil | Cross-sectional online interview | Yes | No | 289 | Children | 6-11 | Anxiety | 100% | High |
| Cauberghe
| 2020 | Belgium | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 2165 | Adolescents | 13-19 | Anxiety, depression, and loneliness | 100% | High |
| Chen
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional survey | Yes | Yes | 7866 | Wuhan, Beijing, and Hangzhou adolescent | 13-19 | Anxiety and depression | 99% | High |
| Dong
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 2270 | School-age children and adolescents | 6-18 | Anxiety, depression, schizophrenia, bipolar disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and substance use disorders | 90% | High |
| Duan
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | No | Yes | 3613 | Children and adolescents | 7-18 | Anxiety and depression | 88% | High |
| Kang
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 5500 | Chinese Adolescents | 15-18 | Depression, tension, anger, fatigue, and confusion | 89% | High |
| Kilincel
| 2020 | Turkey | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 745 | Adolescent | 12-18 | Anxiety and loneliness | 100% | High |
| Metwally
| 2020 | Egypt | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 2015 | Egyptian primary schoolchildren | 8–12 | Common phobias | 100% | High |
| Qi
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 7,383 | Chinese Adolescents | 14-18 | Anxiety and depression | 98% | High |
| Zhang C
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 564 | Teenagers | 12-19 | Anxiety, depression, stress, and PTSD | 87% | High |
| Zhang X
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 9979 | Children and Adolescents | 10-13 | tension, depression, anger, fatigue, and confusion | 100% | High |
| Zhou
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 8140 | Chinese adolescents | 12-18 | Depressive and anxiety | 99% | High |
| Ademhan Tural
| 2020 | Turkey | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 285 | Children with chronic lung disease | 4-18 | Anxiety and depression | 78% | High |
| Wiguna
| 2020 | Indonesia | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 213 | Adolescent | 11-17 | Anxiety | 53% | High |
| Oosterhoff
| 2020 | USA | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 683 | Adolescents | 13-18 | Anxiety, depression, belongingness, burdensomeness | 98% | High |
| zhang J
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | No | 241 | School-age children with ADHD | 6–15 | Acute stress | 100% | High |
| Jiao
| 2020 | China | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 320 | Children and adolescents | 3-18 | Anxiety, depression, clinginess, distraction, irritability, and fear | 100% | Medium |
| Seçer
| 2020 | Turkey | Cross-sectional online survey | Yes | Yes | 598 | Youth | 14-18 | Anxiety, depression, and OCD | 98% | High |
| Bignardi
| 2020 | UK | Longitudinal online survey | Yes | Yes | 659 | Childhood | 7-12 | Anxiety and depression | 25% | High |
| Magson
| 2020 | Australia | longitudinal online survey | Yes | Yes | 467 | Adolescent | 13-16 | Anxiety and depression | 53% | High |
| Rogers
| 2020 | USA | Longitudinal online survey | Yes | Yes | 609 | Adolescents | 13-17 | Anxiety, depression, and loneliness | 67% | High |
| Alves
| 2020 | USA | Longitudinal phone or video call interview | Yes | Yes | 162 | US Children | 9-15 | Anxiety and stress | 51% | High |
| Abdulah
| 2020 | Iraqi | Arts-based methods Interview | Yes | Yes | 15 | Children | 4-18 | Anxiety, depression, loneliness, tiredness, insomnia, and worry | 100% | High |
| Asanov
| 2020 | Germany | Telephonic interview | Yes | No | 2412 | Ecuadorian high-school students | 14-18 | Depression | 62% | High |
| Pinar Senkalfa
| 2020 | Turkey | Telephonic interview | Yes | No | 135 | Children with cystic fibrosis | 13–18 | Anxiety and depression | 67% | High |
| Schwartz-Lifshitz
| 2020 | Israel | Telephonic interview | Yes | Yes | 50 | Children and adolescents with obsessive compulsive disorder | 8-19 | Obsessive compulsive symptoms | 58% | High |
| Saurabh
| 2020 | India | Longitudinal in-person interview | Yes | Yes | 252 | Children and Adolescents | 9-18 | Worry, helplessness, fear, nervousness, annoyance, anxiety, isolation, boredom, and sadness | 100% | High |
| Masuyama
| 2020 | Japan | In-person survey | Yes | Yes | 629 | Adolescents | 12-14 | Anxiety and fear | 100% | High |
| Ellis
| 2020 | Canada | Longitudinal online survey | Yes | Yes | 1316 | Adolescent high school students | 14–18 | anxiety, depression, loneliness, and stress | 80% | High |
| Luthar
| 2020 | USA | Computer-based survey | No | Yes | 2546 | High school adolescents | 14–18 | Anxiety, depression, rule-breaking, and substance use | 96% | High |
| Risin
| 2020 | USA | Online survey | No | No | 109 | Adolescent | 12-19 | Anxiety and fear | 100% | High |
| Smirni
| 2020 | Italy | Online survey | Yes | Yes | 148 | Older Adolescents | 7-19 | Anxiety | 84% | High |
| Xiao
| 2020 | China | Online survey | Yes | Yes | 1680 | Chinese Adolescents | 5-17 | tension, depression, anger, fatigue, confusion, and vigor | 70% | High |
| Yue
| 2020 | China | Online survey | Yes | Yes | 1360 | Children | 8-13 | Anxiety, depression, and PTSD | 100% | High |
ADHD: attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; PTSD: post-traumatic stress disorder; OCD: obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Aims, Measurements, and Conclusions of Included Studies.
| Author | Study aim | Measurements | Conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Abawi
| To explore COVID-19 related anxiety in children with severe obesity and their parents. | Pediatrics Quality of Life Inventory questionnaire, Self-imposed strict quarantine measures | Healthcare professionals addressing COVID-19 related anxiety among children with severe obesity could mitigate its potential negative effects. |
| Garcia de Avila
| To assess the prevalence and associated factors of anxiety among Brazilian schoolchildren during COVID-19. | Children’s Anxiety Questionnaire; Numerical Rating Scale | Public health actions are necessary for the anxiety of children and their parents. |
| Cauberghe
| To examine the benefit of social media for adolescents to cope their anxiety and loneliness during the quarantine. | The Center of Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale, the General Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAP-7), The Brief-Coping Scale | Social media can be useful for adolescents to deal with their anxiety during the COVID-19 quarantine. |
| Chen
| To explore the clinically significant differences in anxiety, depression, and their contributing factors comparing adolescents from Wuhan and other cities in China. | The Short Egna Minnen Beträffande Uppfostran, the Patient Health Questionnaire, Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 | Several risk factors for adolescents’ depression and anxiety during the pandemic. |
| Dong
| To assess the use of internet and potential psychological factors associated with Internet addiction during the pandemic. | The Chinese version of Young’s Internet Addiction Test, the mental state was assessed using the Chinese version of Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale | Observed excessive Internet use was found among Chinese children and adolescents during the pandemic. Age, gender, depression, and stress were the potential key factors. |
| Duan
| To demonstrate the psychological effects on children and adolescents associated with the epidemic. | The Chinese Version of Spence Child Anxiety Scale, the Child Depression Inventory, the Short Version of Smartphone Addiction Scale, the Internet Addiction Scale, the Coping Style Scale | COVID-19 outbreak had a significant psychosocial impact on children and adolescents. |
| Kang
| To explore the relationship of physical Activity and sedentary time with mood states among Chinese adolescents during the pandemic. | The International Physical Activity Questionnaire Short Form - Chinese version, the simplified Chinese Profile of Mood States | Chinese adolescents maintained a sedentary lifestyle and more physical activity was associate with improving mood state among adolescents in the pandemic. |
| Kilincel
| To determine the results of home-quarantine measures taken for adolescents during the pandemic and the affecting factors. | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Trait Anxiety Scale | School closure and home-quarantine measures caused anxiety and loneliness in young people. Various social connections are helpful for them. |
| Metwally
| To identify the prevalence of most common phobias as well as panic disorder due to COVID-19 among Egyptian primary schoolchildren and their determinants. | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, self-report rating scale, | The prevalence of panic disorder during the pandemic is high. Calming down could is recommended for children experienced with a phobia. |
| Qi
| To explore the association between the levels of social support and mental health among Chinese adolescents during the outbreak. | Patient Health Questionnaire-9, Chinese version of the 7-item Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale, Social Support Rate Scale | Higher prevalence of mental health problems among adolescents with medium and low levels of social support in China during COVID-19. |
| Zhang C
| To assess psychological consequences of the pandemic among junior high and high school students in China. | Brief Resilience Scale, Coping Style Questionnaire, Impact of Event Scale-Revised, Twenty-one-item Depression Anxiety Stress Scale. | More than 20% junior high and high school students’ mental health was affected during the pandemic. Resilience and positive coping are beneficial for their mental health status. |
| Zhang X
| To examine the impacts of social isolation on physical activity levels and mood states of children and adolescents and determinants during the epidemic. | The International Physical Activity Questionnaire Short Form, the Profile of Mood States | Higher levels of physical activity were associated with better mood states in children and adolescents. |
| Zhou (A)
| To assess the prevalence of anxiety and depression, and their socio-demographic correlates among Chinese adolescents in the COVID-19 outbreak. | Patient Health Questionnaire-9, the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 | High prevalence of psychological health problems among adolescents are negatively associated with the level of awareness of COVID-19. |
| Ademhan Tural
| To assess the anxiety and depression related to COVID-19 in children with chronic lung disease and their parents and to evaluate parents’ coping strategies. | The General Health Questionnaire-12, The Coping Orientation to Problems Experienced inventory, The coronavirus-related psychiatric symptom scale in children–parental form, other specific questions | Children with chronic lung diseases and their parents have more anxiety due to COVID-19. Parents used more mature coping strategies to manage the stress of the pandemic. |
| Wiguna
| To preliminary identify proportion of adolescents’ emotional and behavior problems and several factors related to it during COVID-19 pandemic in Indonesia. | Self-developed questionnaire, Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire | Adolescents in Indonesia were at high risk for emotional and behavior problems due to school closures in the COVID-19 pandemic. |
| Oosterhoff
| To examine connections between social distancing engagement, social distancing motivations, and adolescents’ mental health and social health. | Self-developed assessment of social distancing, the short fixed-form 8-item Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System anxiety scale, the short-fixed form 8-item Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System depression scale, the Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire, the Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire | Understanding adolescents’ motivations to engage in social distancing may improve social health |
| Zhang J
| To investigate the mental health related conditions of children with ADHD during the COVID-19 outbreak. | Swanson, Nolan, and Pelham scale – parent form, the Child Stress Disorders Checklist, Time allocation of children’s activities, Mood state of the children and parents, Attention to media coverage of the 2019-nCoV outbreak | Children’s ADHD symptoms were significantly worse compared to normal state and attention for appropriate approach identification during this pandemic is required. |
| Jiao
| To investigate the children’s behavioral and emotional responses to the current epidemics. | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders criteria | Clinging, inattention, and irritability were the most severe psychological conditions. Young children (3-6 years) were more likely than older children (6-18 years) to manifest symptoms. Older children were more likely to show inattention and persistent inquiry. Media entertainment was largely successfully used by families over reading and physical exercise for children’s negative psychological conditions. |
| Seçer
| To examine the mediating role of emotional reactivity, depression-anxiety and experiential avoidance in the relationship between the fear of COVID-19 and obsessive-compulsive disorder symptoms in adolescents. | Emotional Reactivity Scale, Depression and Anxiety Scale for Children, The Fear of COVID-19 Scale, Experiential Avoidance Questionnaire | The effect of COVID-19 fear on obsessive-compulsive disorder is mediated by emotional reactivity, experiential avoidance, and depression-anxiety. |
| Bignardi
| To test whether changes in emotional well- being, anxiety and depression occurred during the national lockdown. | the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, Emotional Problems subscale, Revised Child Anxiety and Depression Scale | Children’s depression ratings significantly increased during the lockdown; it was not uniform change across children. |
| Magson
| To examine the psychological impact of the COVID-19 pandemic among adolescents | The Generalized Anxiety subscale, the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire—Child Version, the Student’s Life Satisfaction Scale, 8-item measure assessing COVID-19 related distress, Self-developed Scale for Interpersonal conflict, the Social Connectedness Scale | Adolescents were more concerned about the government restrictions for covid-19 management, which were associated with increased anxiety and depressive symptoms, and decreased life satisfaction. |
| Rogers
| To assess depth and breadth in adolescents’ subjective experiences with COVID-19 and to examine whether these perceptions were associated with their mental health above and beyond their pre-pandemic mental health levels. | Open-ended responses regarding experiences with COVID-19, Perceived relationship changes during COVID-19, Perceived mood changes during COVID-19, Indices of mental health, Demographic controls. | Sensitize clinicians and scholars to the vulnerabilities, as well as resiliencies presented to U.S. adolescents during the early months of COVID-19. |
| Alves
| To investigate the emotional responses, physical activity, and sedentary behaviors related to anxiety among US children during the pandemic. | 24-h physical activity recall, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children, the Positive and Negative Affect Schedule for Children, the shortened 10-item Positive and Negative Affect Schedule for Children | Maintaining positive affect, engaging in physical activity, and limiting leisure screen time might be important for child mental health during stressful periods. |
| Abdulah
| To explore the psychological wellbeing of children during the COVID-19 outbreak among children in Iraqi Kurdistan. | Self-developed draw his/her feelings, reflections, and responses during the COVID-19 on a paper | Children exhibited a strong feeling of distress, loneliness, and fear during the COVID-19 outbreak. |
| Asanov
| To evaluate students’ time during the period of quarantine, examine their access to remote learning, and measure their mental health status. | Self-developed scales for remote learning technologies, 24-hour time use questionnaire, The 5-item mental health index | School closure and social isolation were the two main problems for students, while the majority of them are happy, except for 16% were depressive. |
| Pinar Senkalfa
| To evaluate anxiety among children with cystic fibrosis and their mothers related to the COVID-19 pandemic. | The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children, the State and Trait Anxiety Inventory | COVID-19 had no effect on the anxiety of children with cystic fibrosis. Informing their parents about COVID-19 by teleconference may decrease anxiety. |
| Schwartz-Lifshitz
| To evaluate whether Obsessive compulsive symptoms exacerbated during the first wave of COVID-19 in children and adolescents. | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual version 5, Clinical Global Impression- symptom severity and improvement scales, the Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-child version, Israel Index of Deprivation, Self-developed scale for patients’ subjective feeling of functioning | Israeli children and adolescents with obsessive compulsive symptoms coped well with COVID-19 during the first two months of the pandemic. |
| Saurabh
| To describes understanding, compliance and psychological impact of quarantine on children and adolescents in the Covid-19 outbreak. | Self-developed questionnaire for knowledge of quarantine facility, compliance during quarantine and psychological effect of quarantine | Adequate financial support and enhanced knowledge can improve compliance and mental health problems. |
| Masuyama
| To adapt and validate a Japanese-version Fear ofCOVID-19 Scale (FCV-19S) with a sample of adolescent students from Japan. | Japanese-version FCV-19S, Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale, Patient Health Questionnaire for Adolescents, and Perceived Vulnerability to Disease Scale | The Japanese-version FCV-19S has a high internal consistency and a moderately good construct validity. |
| Ellis
| To examine the relationships between psychological adjustment and reported stress associated with the initial COVID-19 crisis. | Self-developed scales for COVID-19 stress, Social media use and Time in daily activities, the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI), the revised UCLA Loneliness Scale | Adolescents were very concerned about the COVID-19 crisis and are particularly worried about schooling and peer relationships. |
| Luthar
| To examine the reliability and validity of the Well-Being Index as a useful potential measure of well-being of students in school-wide assessments. | Well-Being Index, Schools’ Assessments of Students’ Mental Health, Extant Measures of Youth Mental Health | Well-Being Index Is a brief, psychometrically sound measure to assess the adjustment of adolescents. |
| Risin
| To use statistical analysis to analyze the relationships between emotions and actual understanding of COVID-19. | 7 multiple choice questions on a range of topics related to the virus such as spread, key terminology, and cause of death, self-developed questions for anxiety, fear as well as background | Knowledge of covid-19 is linked to lower anxiety and fear levels. |
| Smirni
| To investigate the state of anxiety and emotional awareness in a sample of healthy older adolescents. | The Zung Self-Rating Anxiety Scale (SAS), the self-reported Italian Emotion Awareness Questionnaire (EAQ), | COVID-19 pandemic may be a risk condition for an increased state of anxiety in older adolescents. |
| Xiao
| To understand Chinese adolescents’ mood and physical activity during lockdown. | The Chinese version of the Profile of Mood States short form, the Leisure-Time Exercise Questions, Self-reports for Screen Time, Conflicts with Parents and Demographic Factors | Promoting physical activity and decreasing screen time among adolescents during school closure is an effective way to minimize negative mood and conflicts with parents. |
| Yue
| To examine the psychological status of Chinese families during the COVID-19 outbreak and determinants. | The Chinese version of Zung Self-rating Anxiety Scale, Chinese version of Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale for Children, the Chinese version of Zung Self-rating Depression Scale the revised Chinese version of PTSD Checklist for DSM-5, A 5-point Likert scale | Children and their parent in non-severe area didn’t suffer major psychological distress due to psychological interventions during the pandemic. |
UCLA: University of California, Los Angeles.