| Literature DB >> 35725540 |
Gertrud Sofie Hafstad1, Sjur Skjørshammer Sætren2, Tore Wentzel-Larsen3, Else-Marie Augusti3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Measures taken to limit the spread of the COVID-19 may have had unintended consequences for the mental and somatic health of children and adolescents.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent mental health; Anxiety and depression; COVID-19; Population sample; Prospective study; Somatic health complaints
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35725540 PMCID: PMC9212438 DOI: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2022.05.009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Adolesc Health ISSN: 1054-139X Impact factor: 7.830
Figure 1Overview of study design and sample size at the three data collection points.
Characteristics of the sample at the three measurement points
| Variables | T1 (2019) | T2 (2020) | T3 (2021) | T1_T2-T3 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | % | N | % | N | % | N | % | |
| Gender | ||||||||
| Girls | 4,592 | 50.0 | 1,774 | 50.1 | 1,675 | 47.6 | 254 | 51.0 |
| Boys | 4,538 | 49.4 | 1,733 | 49.0 | 1,733 | 49.0 | 241 | 48.4 |
| Non binary | 63 | 0.7 | 33 | 0.9 | 63 | 1.8 | <5 | - |
| Single parent household | ||||||||
| Yes | 2,725 | 29.7 | 1,070 | 30.3 | 1,077 | 30.7 | 138 | 27.8 |
| No | 6,458 | 70.3 | 2,457 | 69.7 | 2,429 | 69.3 | 358 | 72.2 |
| Country of origin | ||||||||
| Non-Nordic | 2,349 | 25.9 | 858 | 24.6 | 904 | 26.1 | 101 | 20.5 |
| Nordic | 6,707 | 74.1 | 2,627 | 75.4 | 2,554 | 73.9 | 391 | 79.5 |
| Family affluence | ||||||||
| Low | 351 | 3.8 | 103 | 3.0 | 131 | 3.8 | 10 | 2.0 |
| High/Normal | 8,773 | 96.2 | 3,369 | 97.0 | 3,337 | 3.8 | 484 | 98.0 |
| Age: mean, SD (12–16) | 14.11 | 0.8 | 14.52 | 0.9 | 14.48 | .96 | 14.53 | .52 |
| HSCL: mean, SD (0–3) | .57 | .66 | .55 | .64 | .72 | .74 | .42 | .53 |
| CSSI: mean, SD (0–3) | .60 | .67 | .53 | .65 | .79 | .83 | .49 | .54 |
Sample with data on all three measurement points–descriptive data reported from the T1 measurement for comparison.
Mixed effects model predicting change in anxiety depression (Model 1) and somatic health complaints (Model 2) from pre to early and late pandemic
| Model 1. Anxiety and depression | T2 | T3 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interactions with time | Est. | 95% CI | Est. | 95% CI | ||
| Gender (ref· boy) | −.11 | −.21, 0.01 | <.001 | −.17 | −.25, −.09 | <.001 |
| Family affluence (ref·low) | −.08 | −.49, 0.33 | .69 | .06 | −.20, 0.32 | .66 |
| Living in the capital area of Norway | .01 | −.10, 0.12 | .85 | .04 | −.09, 0.12 | .40 |
| Parents' country of origin (ref·Nordic) | −.00 | −.13, 0.13 | .97 | .00 | −.01, 0.10 | .94 |
| Single-parent household | .09 | −.03, 0.21 | .15 | .09 | −.01, 0.18 | .07 |
| Prior abuse exposure | −.05 | −.11, 0.00 | .06 | −.59 | −.10, 0.02 | .08 |
| Model 2. Somatic health complaints | T2 | T3 | ||||
| Interactions with time | Est. | 95% CI | Est. | 95% CI | ||
| Gender (ref· boy) | −.16 | −.27, −.04 | <.01 | −.23 | −.32, −.13 | <.001 |
| Family affluence (ref· low) | −.00 | −.45, 0.45 | .99 | −.07 | −.36, 0.22 | .61 |
| Living in the capital area of Norway | −.01 | −.13, 0.11 | .86 | .01 | −.10, 0.08 | .80 |
| Parents' country of origin (ref Nordic) | −.08 | −.07, 0.22 | .28 | .05 | −.07, 0.16 | .41 |
| Single-parent household | .06 | −.07, 0.19 | .36 | .04 | −.06, 0.14 | .43 |
| Prior abuse exposure | −.04 | −.10, 0.02 | .14 | −.05 | −.10, −.00 | .03 |
Linear regression model predicting the level of mental health complaints one year into the pandemic
| Variables | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 variables | ||||||
| HSCL | .41 (.29, .53) | <.001 | .29 (.18, .40) | <.001 | .27 (.16, .37) | <.001 |
| Male gender | −.29 (−.40, −.19) | <.001 | −.29 (−.39, −.18) | <.001 | −.24 (−.35, −.14) | <.001 |
| Family affluence | −.35 (−.79, .09) | .121 | −.38 (−.80, .03) | .071 | −.36 (−.75, .03) | .070 |
| Non-Nordic country of origin | .01 (−.12, .15) | .833 | .03 (−.09, .16) | .600 | .03 (−.09, .15) | .638 |
| Single-parent household | .13 (.01, .26) | .032 | .14 (.02, .26) | .020 | .12 (.01, .23) | .039 |
| Abuse exposure (lifetime) | .12 (.05, .18) | .000 | .12 (.06, .18) | <.001 | .09 (.03, .15) | .002 |
| T2 variables | ||||||
| Loneliness | .36 (.26, .47) | <.001 | .18 (.07, .28) | .001 | ||
| Pandemic-related worries | −.09 (−.16, −.02) | .014 | −.08 (−.17, −.00) | .045 | ||
| Parents' pandemic-related job loss | −.05 (−.12, .03) | .216 | −.02 (−.10, −.05) | .496 | ||
| T3 variables | ||||||
| Loneliness | .38 (.28, .48) | <.001 | ||||
| Pandemic-related worries | .02 (−.07, .11) | .689 | ||||
| Parents' pandemic-related job loss | −.04 (−.12, .04) | .306 | ||||
| R2 = .24 | R2 = .33 | R2 = .40 | ||||
Linear regression model predicting the level of somatic complaints one year into the pandemic
| Variables | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 variables | ||||||
| CSSI | .55 (.43, .68) | <.001 | .53 (.41, .65) | <.001 | .50 (.38, .62) | <.001 |
| Male gender | −.30 (−.42, −.18) | <.001 | −.30 (−.42, −.18) | <.001 | −.30 (−.42, −.18) | <.001 |
| Family affluence | −.11 (−.60, .37) | .655 | −.13 (−.60, .34) | .587 | −.16 (−.62, .31) | .511 |
| Non-Nordic country of origin | −.00 (−.15, .15) | .994 | .01 (−.13, .16) | .843 | .00 (−.14, .14) | .998 |
| Single-parent household | .11 (−.03, .27) | .121 | .10 (−.03, .24) | .132 | .10 (−.03, .23) | .138 |
| Abuse exposure (lifetime) | .10 (.03, .17) | .005 | .09 (.02, .14) | .008 | .08 (.01, .15) | .018 |
| T2 variables | ||||||
| Loneliness | .23 (.11, .34) | <.001 | .11 (−.01, .23) | .083 | ||
| Pandemic-related worries | −.10 (−.19, −.01) | .021 | −.03 (−.13, .07) | .546 | ||
| Parents' pandemic-related job loss | .04 (−.04, .13) | .325 | .07 (−.02, .15) | .131 | ||
| T3 variables | ||||||
| Loneliness | .25 (.13, .37) | <.001 | ||||
| Pandemic-related worries | −.10 (−.20, .00) | .058 | ||||
| Parents' pandemic-related job loss | −.05 (−.14, .05) | .355 | ||||
| R2 = .26 | R2 = .30 | R2 = .33 | ||||
| Δ R2 = .04 | Δ R2 = .03 | |||||