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Immunosuppressed children and young people, psychosocial wellbeing, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a prospective cohort study

Immunosuppressed children and young people, psychosocial wellbeing, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a prospective cohort study
Immunosuppressed children and young people, psychosocial wellbeing, and the COVID-19 pandemic: a prospective cohort study
Aim: this study aims to describe the psychosocial experiences of immunosuppressed CYP while Britain moved from the COVID-19 pandemic to epidemic.

Methods: we invited 1021 CYP participating in the ImmunoCOVID-19 study to complete a mental wellbeing survey in November/December 2021, January/February 2022, and March/April 2022, 467 accepted the invitation. At these 3 timepoints we assessed health-related-quality-of-life (HRQOL) and mood using the positive and negative affect scale. A linear mixed model repeated measure approach was used to analyse this prospective cohort data.

Results: in November/December 2021 and January/February 2022 the CYP reported HRQOL levels were noticeably lower compared to pre-COVID-19 norm levels. However, as the immunosuppressed CYP moved towards the COVID-19 epidemic (March/April 2022), HRQOL levels increased and negative mood decreased. Our findings confirmed early pandemic findings indicating that younger children’s positive mood and school functioning were less affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and that CYP’s mood, physical and school functioning and social support were more affected by the pandemic if they lived in low-income households. Moreover, parental anxiety and/or depression decreased CYP’s HRQOL and mood, except for psychological functioning and autonomy.

Conclusion: as Britain moved into the COVID-19 epidemic immunosuppressed CYP were slowly recovering from the psychosocial impact of the pandemic. More importantly, CYP’s psychosocial wellbeing was impacted by parental mental health, household income, and age regardless of the COVID-19 circumstances. Health and social care provided to immunosuppressed CYP should therefore include family guidance and interventions to support not only the psychosocial wellbeing of the paediatric patients but also parents.
child & adolescent, COVID-19, immunosuppression, emotional mental health, prospective cohort study
Driessens, Corine
59335f14-4ead-4692-9969-7ed9cc1ccf08
Mills, Lynne
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Patel, Ravin
3e35c431-1bc5-4c69-b353-1ca3cd240c1d
Culliford, David
25511573-74d3-422a-b0ee-dfe60f80df87
Gbesemete, Diane
45c5ae20-20f8-4bc0-b3cd-c9a102e94471
Lee, Emma
595cf4a5-daab-4bbb-b3f6-73a746bb40f6
Shaunak, Meera
8c081c66-eb60-47d2-83bb-6fa95933386d
Chappell, Harry
8e90cbd3-0416-4c1f-8718-88b09dd785a9
Faust, Saul N.
f97df780-9f9b-418e-b349-7adf63e150c1
Graaf, Hans
fb174fd4-5130-4a17-88ca-832c150e94e7
Driessens, Corine
59335f14-4ead-4692-9969-7ed9cc1ccf08
Mills, Lynne
8f2412fd-12e7-4653-b85d-57bb56f68d01
Patel, Ravin
3e35c431-1bc5-4c69-b353-1ca3cd240c1d
Culliford, David
25511573-74d3-422a-b0ee-dfe60f80df87
Gbesemete, Diane
45c5ae20-20f8-4bc0-b3cd-c9a102e94471
Lee, Emma
595cf4a5-daab-4bbb-b3f6-73a746bb40f6
Shaunak, Meera
8c081c66-eb60-47d2-83bb-6fa95933386d
Chappell, Harry
8e90cbd3-0416-4c1f-8718-88b09dd785a9
Faust, Saul N.
f97df780-9f9b-418e-b349-7adf63e150c1
Graaf, Hans
fb174fd4-5130-4a17-88ca-832c150e94e7

[Unknown type: UNSPECIFIED]

Record type: UNSPECIFIED

Abstract

Aim: this study aims to describe the psychosocial experiences of immunosuppressed CYP while Britain moved from the COVID-19 pandemic to epidemic.

Methods: we invited 1021 CYP participating in the ImmunoCOVID-19 study to complete a mental wellbeing survey in November/December 2021, January/February 2022, and March/April 2022, 467 accepted the invitation. At these 3 timepoints we assessed health-related-quality-of-life (HRQOL) and mood using the positive and negative affect scale. A linear mixed model repeated measure approach was used to analyse this prospective cohort data.

Results: in November/December 2021 and January/February 2022 the CYP reported HRQOL levels were noticeably lower compared to pre-COVID-19 norm levels. However, as the immunosuppressed CYP moved towards the COVID-19 epidemic (March/April 2022), HRQOL levels increased and negative mood decreased. Our findings confirmed early pandemic findings indicating that younger children’s positive mood and school functioning were less affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and that CYP’s mood, physical and school functioning and social support were more affected by the pandemic if they lived in low-income households. Moreover, parental anxiety and/or depression decreased CYP’s HRQOL and mood, except for psychological functioning and autonomy.

Conclusion: as Britain moved into the COVID-19 epidemic immunosuppressed CYP were slowly recovering from the psychosocial impact of the pandemic. More importantly, CYP’s psychosocial wellbeing was impacted by parental mental health, household income, and age regardless of the COVID-19 circumstances. Health and social care provided to immunosuppressed CYP should therefore include family guidance and interventions to support not only the psychosocial wellbeing of the paediatric patients but also parents.

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Published date: 1 December 2022
Keywords: child & adolescent, COVID-19, immunosuppression, emotional mental health, prospective cohort study

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 485202
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485202
PURE UUID: ab5de26b-1fb5-4409-9885-a42527ba4733
ORCID for Corine Driessens: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3767-7683
ORCID for David Culliford: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1663-0253
ORCID for Saul N. Faust: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3410-7642

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 01 Dec 2023 17:36
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:26

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Contributors

Author: Corine Driessens ORCID iD
Author: Lynne Mills
Author: Ravin Patel
Author: David Culliford ORCID iD
Author: Diane Gbesemete
Author: Emma Lee
Author: Meera Shaunak
Author: Harry Chappell
Author: Saul N. Faust ORCID iD
Author: Hans Graaf

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