| Literature DB >> 35616715 |
Karen Fischer1,2, Jacintha M Tieskens3, Tinca J C Polderman4,5,6,7,8, Arne Popma2,9,10, Michiel A J Luijten2,11,12, Josjan Zijlmans2,9, Hedy A van Oers2,11, Rowdy de Groot2,13, Daniël van der Doelen14, Hanneke van Ewijk3, Helen Klip14, Rikkert M van der Lans3, Ronald De Meyer15, Malindi van der Mheen2,10,16, Maud M van Muilekom2,11, I Hyun Ruisch17, Lorynn Teela2,11, Germie van den Berg18, Hilgo Bruining9, Rachel van der Rijken15, Jan Buitelaar14,19, Pieter J Hoekstra17, Ramón Lindauer10,16, Kim J Oostrom2,11, Wouter Staal14, Robert Vermeiren3,20, Ronald Cornet2,13, Lotte Haverman2,11, Meike Bartels1,2.
Abstract
The aim of the study was to assess internalizing problems before and during the pandemic with data from Dutch consortium Child and adolescent mental health and wellbeing in times of the COVID-19 pandemic, consisting of two Dutch general population samples (GS) and two clinical samples (CS) referred to youth/psychiatric care. Measures of internalizing problems were obtained from ongoing data collections pre-pandemic (NGS = 35,357; NCS = 4487) and twice during the pandemic, in Apr-May 2020 (NGS = 3938; clinical: NCS = 1008) and in Nov-Dec 2020 (NGS = 1489; NCS = 1536), in children and adolescents (8-18 years) with parent (Brief Problem Monitor) and/or child reports (Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System®). Results show that, in the general population, internalizing problems were higher during the first peak of the pandemic compared to pre-pandemic based on both child and parent reports. Yet, over the course of the pandemic, on both child and parent reports, similar or lower levels of internalizing problems were observed. Children in the clinical population reported more internalizing symptoms over the course of the pandemic while parents did not report differences in internalizing symptoms from pre-pandemic to the first peak of the pandemic nor over the course of the pandemic. Overall, the findings indicate that children and adolescents of both the general and clinical population were affected negatively by the pandemic in terms of their internalizing problems. Attention is therefore warranted to investigate long-term effects and to monitor if internalizing problems return to pre-pandemic levels or if they remain elevated post-pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: Anxiety; COVID-19; Children and adolescents; Coronavirus; Depression; Internalizing problems; Mental health
Year: 2022 PMID: 35616715 PMCID: PMC9133820 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-022-01991-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 5.349
Fig. 1Timeline COVID-19 Regulations in the Netherlands
Sociodemographic information of the samples before and during the pandemic for all cohorts
| Cohort | Pre-pandemic | Pandemic Apr–May 2020 | Pandemic Nov–Dec 2020 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| %Males | %Mother ratings | %Males | %Mother ratings | %Males | %Mother ratings | |||||||
| General population | ||||||||||||
| Parent-reported internalizing problems (BPM) | ||||||||||||
| NTR | 34,038 | 49.5% | 97.7% | 10.4 (1.9) | 3524 | 53.7% | 84.7% | 9. 2 (2.1) | 1168 | 49.0% | 88.1% | 9.8 (2.3) |
| Child-reported internalizing problems (PROMIS) | ||||||||||||
| KLIK | 1319 | 49.4% | N/Aa | 12.7 (3.1) | 832 | 46.3% | N/Aa | 13.4 (2.8) | 746 | 53.3% | N/Aa | 13.7 (3.2) |
| Clinical population | ||||||||||||
| Parent-reported internalizing problems (BPM) | ||||||||||||
| DREAMS | 1395 | 61.9% | N/Ab | 11.4 (2.4) | 453 | 55.6% | 79.9% | 13.1 (3.1) | 726 | 58.5% | 84.4% | 13.2 (2.9) |
| LDY | 3092 | 62.3% | 68.8% | 13.2 (3.0) | 280 | 62.5% | 61.4% | 13.4 (2.9) | 302 | 64.6% | 53.0% | 13.7 (3.0) |
| Child-reported internalizing problems (PROMIS) | ||||||||||||
| DREAMS | 275 | 54.2% | N/Aa | 13.0 (3.1) | 508 | 50.2% | N/Aa | 13.9 (2.9) | ||||
BPM Brief problem monitor, PROMIS Patient-reported outcomes measurement information system
aNot applicable due to child report measure
bNot applicable due to unknown informant
Means and standard deviations of internalizing problems before and during the pandemic in all cohorts
| Cohort | Pre-pandemic (a) | Pandemic Apr–May 2020 (b) | Pandemic Nov–Dec 2020 (c) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SD | SD | SD | ||||
| General population | ||||||
| Parent-reported internalizing problems (BPM) | ||||||
| NTR | 0.90b,c | (1.51) | 1.49a,c | (1.99) | 1.07a,b | (1.71) |
| Child-reported anxiety problems (PROMIS) | ||||||
| KLIK | 43.76b,c | (9.87) | 50.78a,c | (7.78) | 49.61a,b | (8.25) |
| Child-reported depressive problems(PROMIS) | ||||||
| KLIK | 44.73b,c | (10.62) | 49.53a | (8.20) | 48.81a | (9.18) |
| Clinical population | ||||||
| Parent-reported internalizing problems (BPM) | ||||||
| DREAMS | 5.24 | (3.24) | 4.91 | (3.52) | 5.04 | (3.41) |
| LDY | 3.86 | (3.09) | 3.75 | (3.16) | 3.84 | (3.24) |
| Child-reported anxiety problems (PROMIS) | ||||||
| DREAMS | – | – | 51.45c | (8.98) | 54.45b | (9.21) |
| Child-reported depressive problems(PROMIS) | ||||||
| DREAMS | – | – | 51.98c | (10.64) | 55.67b | (10.81) |
BPM Brief problem monitor, PROMIS Patient-reported outcomes measurement information system
a,b,crepresent significant differences at p < .05 between measurements as indicated by independent sample t tests
Proportions of children within subgroups based on severity of the internalizing problems before and during the pandemic in all cohorts
| Cohort | Subgroup | Pre-pandemic (a) | Pandemic Apr–May 2020 (b) | Pandemic Nov–Dec 2020 (c) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| General population | ||||
| Parent-reported internalizing problems (BPM) | ||||
| NTR | Elevated | 7.1%b,c | 15.6%a,c | 10.4%a,b |
| Child-reported anxiety problems (PROMIS) | ||||
| KLIK | Normal | 74.8%b,c | 46.2%a,c | 52.9%a,b |
| Mild | 20.0%b,c | 46.4%a,c | 38.3%a,b | |
| Severe | 5.2%b,c | 7.5%a | 6.7%a | |
| Child-reported depressive problems (PROMIS) | ||||
| KLIK | Normal | 74.8%b,c | 59.9%a | 61.5%a |
| Mild | 20%b,c | 36.9%a | 34.0%a | |
| Severe | 5.2%b | 3.2%a | 4.5% | |
| Clinical population | ||||
| Parent-reported internalizing problems (BPM) | ||||
| DREAMS | Elevated | 74.0%A | 69.3% | 70.9% |
| LDY | Elevated | 49.9% | 47.1% | 49.0% |
| Child-reported anxiety problems(PROMIS) | ||||
| DREAMS | Normal | – | 46.2%c | 33.3%b |
| Mild | – | 40.0% | 43.2% | |
| Severe | – | 13.8%c | 23.5%b | |
| Child-reported depressive problems (PROMIS) | ||||
| DREAMS | Normal | – | 53.2%c | 38.7%b |
| Mild | – | 31.2% | 33.2% | |
| Severe | – | 15.6%c | 28.1%b | |
BPM Brief problem monitor, PROMIS Patient-reported outcomes measurement information system
a,b,crepresent significant differences at p < .05 between measurements within populations as indicated by χ2 test.
AFor the pre-pandemic parent reports in the DREAMS sample the informant is unknown, therefore we excluded children with a score of 3, as they could not be categorized properly, see Table S1 for rated dependent cut-off details; remaining N = 1257
Fig. 2Yearly proportions of children with normal and elevated internalizing problems based on parent reports in the NTR cohort (general population) since 1995 until 2019, first pandemic measurement (Apr–May 2020), and second pandemic measurement (Nov–Dec 2020). Proportions of normal and elevated internalizing problems (left) and only elevated problems, scaled larger (right)