Changes in UK pre-schoolers’ mental health symptoms over the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic: Data from Co-SPYCE study
Changes in UK pre-schoolers’ mental health symptoms over the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic: Data from Co-SPYCE study
Background: the COVID-19 pandemic caused significant disruption to the lives of children and their families. Pre-school children may have been particularly vulnerable to the effects of the pandemic, with the closure of childcare facilities, playgrounds, playcentres and parent and toddler groups limiting their opportunities for social interaction at a crucial stage of development. Additionally, for parents working from home, caring for pre-school aged children who require high levels of support and care, was likely challenging. We conducted an intensive longitudinal, but not nationally representative, study to examine trajectories of pre-schoolers’ mental symptoms in the United Kingdom during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: UK‐based parents and carers (n = 1520) of pre-school‐aged children (2 to 4 years) completed monthly online surveys about their pre-schoolers’ mental health between April 2020 and March 2021. The survey examined changes in children’s emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention.
Results: in our final mixed-effects models, our predictors (fixed effects) accounted for 5% of the variance in each of conduct problems, emotional symptoms and hyperactivity / inattention symptoms scores, and the combined random and fixed effects accounted for between 64-73% of the variance. Pre-schoolers’ emotional problems and hyperactivity/inattention symptoms declined from April through summer 2020 and then increased again during the autumn and winter 2020/2021 as lockdowns were re-introduced. Pre-schoolers who attended childcare showed greater decline in symptom severity than those who did not. Older children, compared to younger, showed greater lability of emotion symptom severity. Attending childcare predicted lower symptom severity across all three domains of conduct problems, emotional symptoms, and hyperactivity/inattention, while the opposite pattern was observed for children whose parent had a mental health problem.
Conclusions: our findings reinforce the importance of examining pre-schoolers’ mental health in the context of micro and macro-level factors. Interventions focusing on family factors such as parent mental health, as well as continued provision of childcare, may have most potential to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on young children’s mental health.
Pre-school, children, mental health, Covid-19, pandemic, childcare, parents
e12163
Lawrence, Peter J.
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Skripkauskaite, Simona
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Shum, Adrienne
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Waite, Polly
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Dodd, Helen
db72e2f5-f249-4b4e-a54b-addc96f7bc47
June 2023
Lawrence, Peter J.
0d45e107-38ef-4932-aec1-504573de01ef
Skripkauskaite, Simona
9b741ba9-3605-42e0-baa3-faaf489188ec
Shum, Adrienne
f5b6ff56-67ee-48c7-8d4a-01acd0104c99
Waite, Polly
a4b1d85d-89a3-434f-95dd-384bcd667d95
Dodd, Helen
db72e2f5-f249-4b4e-a54b-addc96f7bc47
Lawrence, Peter J., Skripkauskaite, Simona, Shum, Adrienne, Waite, Polly and Dodd, Helen
(2023)
Changes in UK pre-schoolers’ mental health symptoms over the first year of the Covid-19 pandemic: Data from Co-SPYCE study.
JCPP advances, 3 (2), , [e12163].
(doi:10.1002/jcv2.12163).
Abstract
Background: the COVID-19 pandemic caused significant disruption to the lives of children and their families. Pre-school children may have been particularly vulnerable to the effects of the pandemic, with the closure of childcare facilities, playgrounds, playcentres and parent and toddler groups limiting their opportunities for social interaction at a crucial stage of development. Additionally, for parents working from home, caring for pre-school aged children who require high levels of support and care, was likely challenging. We conducted an intensive longitudinal, but not nationally representative, study to examine trajectories of pre-schoolers’ mental symptoms in the United Kingdom during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Methods: UK‐based parents and carers (n = 1520) of pre-school‐aged children (2 to 4 years) completed monthly online surveys about their pre-schoolers’ mental health between April 2020 and March 2021. The survey examined changes in children’s emotional symptoms, conduct problems and hyperactivity/inattention.
Results: in our final mixed-effects models, our predictors (fixed effects) accounted for 5% of the variance in each of conduct problems, emotional symptoms and hyperactivity / inattention symptoms scores, and the combined random and fixed effects accounted for between 64-73% of the variance. Pre-schoolers’ emotional problems and hyperactivity/inattention symptoms declined from April through summer 2020 and then increased again during the autumn and winter 2020/2021 as lockdowns were re-introduced. Pre-schoolers who attended childcare showed greater decline in symptom severity than those who did not. Older children, compared to younger, showed greater lability of emotion symptom severity. Attending childcare predicted lower symptom severity across all three domains of conduct problems, emotional symptoms, and hyperactivity/inattention, while the opposite pattern was observed for children whose parent had a mental health problem.
Conclusions: our findings reinforce the importance of examining pre-schoolers’ mental health in the context of micro and macro-level factors. Interventions focusing on family factors such as parent mental health, as well as continued provision of childcare, may have most potential to mitigate the impact of COVID-19 on young children’s mental health.
Text
Changes in UK pre‐schoolers mental health symptoms
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 24 February 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 15 April 2023
Published date: June 2023
Additional Information:
Funding information: UK Research and Innovation, Grant/AwardNumber: ES/V004034/1; Westminster Foundation
Keywords:
Pre-school, children, mental health, Covid-19, pandemic, childcare, parents
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 476301
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/476301
ISSN: 2692-9384
PURE UUID: 296a4203-0c14-4e7a-91a2-a5161a242571
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Date deposited: 19 Apr 2023 16:33
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:34
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Contributors
Author:
Simona Skripkauskaite
Author:
Adrienne Shum
Author:
Polly Waite
Author:
Helen Dodd
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