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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions: a systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies

The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions: a systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions: a systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies
Background: systematic reviews have suggested mixed effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people. However, most included studies focused on the general population and were cross-sectional. The long-term impact on those with pre-existing mental health and/or neurodevelopmental conditions remains unclear. Thus, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to examine the longitudinal impact of the pandemic on the mental health of this clinical population and potential explanatory factors.

Methods: Ovid Medline, Embase, APA PsycInfo, and Global Health databases were searched between 1st January 2020 and 3rd August 2023 (PROSPERO CRD42022383546). We included longitudinal studies that compared mental health symptoms between pre- and during pandemic and/or during pandemic timepoints in children and young people (≤18 years old) with pre-existing mental and/or neurodevelopmental conditions. Outcomes included internalising, externalising, and other symptoms. Risk of bias was rated using an adapted tool. Included studies were narratively synthesised and multi-level meta-analyses were conducted where the number of studies was sufficient.

Results: we identified 21 studies (N = 2,617) from 6,083 records. Studies differed across countries, diagnoses, measures, informants, and timepoints. All had overall moderate-to-high risk of bias. Narrative synthesis found mixed evidence of symptom change, with individual studies showing increase/reduction/no change. Factors such as diagnosis, baseline symptom severity, age, and sex/gender may explain variation in outcomes. Multi-level meta-analyses were feasible for a limited number of outcomes and found no significant changes in internalising and externalising symptoms pre- versus during pandemic or internalising symptoms between 2020 pandemic phases, and high heterogeneity was noted.

Conclusions: the impact of the pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing conditions varied according to individual and contextual vulnerabilities, which were not fully captured in pooled analyses. Further research needs to investigate longer term impacts and better stratify this vulnerable population.
COVID-19; pandemic; children and young people; longitudinal; mental health, neurodevelopmental
1469-7610
Ching, Brian C.F.
33e57b38-959d-4a1a-977a-0560ea16fa54
Downs, Johnny
a062e656-bd1d-42d4-9ca7-4ab8936cbde1
Zhang, Shuo
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Abdul Cader, Hannah
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Penhallow, Jessica
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Voraite, Elvina
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Popnikolova, Teodora
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Wickersham, Alice
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Parlatini, Valeria
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Simonoff, Emily
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Ching, Brian C.F.
33e57b38-959d-4a1a-977a-0560ea16fa54
Downs, Johnny
a062e656-bd1d-42d4-9ca7-4ab8936cbde1
Zhang, Shuo
7be0a743-6b96-4b76-b6cc-be5aa3604ef8
Abdul Cader, Hannah
e6b210cc-b833-49c5-a29e-d8e4f2ff65f9
Penhallow, Jessica
3fbd181e-1c74-4539-ae47-81c5bef399c4
Voraite, Elvina
8dcebf22-3449-4ee1-9083-842d2f62839a
Popnikolova, Teodora
f5f8cdd2-721a-4487-a8fe-d9934c0d5e64
Wickersham, Alice
4ddf025f-fa8c-4a16-9e7b-d34a554cba65
Parlatini, Valeria
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Simonoff, Emily
f47d91a8-3d57-4183-bf24-80352c55eedc

Ching, Brian C.F., Downs, Johnny, Zhang, Shuo, Abdul Cader, Hannah, Penhallow, Jessica, Voraite, Elvina, Popnikolova, Teodora, Wickersham, Alice, Parlatini, Valeria and Simonoff, Emily (2025) The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing mental health and neurodevelopmental conditions: a systematic review and meta-analysis of longitudinal studies. The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: systematic reviews have suggested mixed effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people. However, most included studies focused on the general population and were cross-sectional. The long-term impact on those with pre-existing mental health and/or neurodevelopmental conditions remains unclear. Thus, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to examine the longitudinal impact of the pandemic on the mental health of this clinical population and potential explanatory factors.

Methods: Ovid Medline, Embase, APA PsycInfo, and Global Health databases were searched between 1st January 2020 and 3rd August 2023 (PROSPERO CRD42022383546). We included longitudinal studies that compared mental health symptoms between pre- and during pandemic and/or during pandemic timepoints in children and young people (≤18 years old) with pre-existing mental and/or neurodevelopmental conditions. Outcomes included internalising, externalising, and other symptoms. Risk of bias was rated using an adapted tool. Included studies were narratively synthesised and multi-level meta-analyses were conducted where the number of studies was sufficient.

Results: we identified 21 studies (N = 2,617) from 6,083 records. Studies differed across countries, diagnoses, measures, informants, and timepoints. All had overall moderate-to-high risk of bias. Narrative synthesis found mixed evidence of symptom change, with individual studies showing increase/reduction/no change. Factors such as diagnosis, baseline symptom severity, age, and sex/gender may explain variation in outcomes. Multi-level meta-analyses were feasible for a limited number of outcomes and found no significant changes in internalising and externalising symptoms pre- versus during pandemic or internalising symptoms between 2020 pandemic phases, and high heterogeneity was noted.

Conclusions: the impact of the pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing conditions varied according to individual and contextual vulnerabilities, which were not fully captured in pooled analyses. Further research needs to investigate longer term impacts and better stratify this vulnerable population.

Text
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the mental health of children and young people with pre-existing men - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 9 January 2026.
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 January 2025
Keywords: COVID-19; pandemic; children and young people; longitudinal; mental health, neurodevelopmental

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 497015
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/497015
ISSN: 1469-7610
PURE UUID: bad92af5-2d4a-4cd5-ba5e-60896fb3c8b8
ORCID for Valeria Parlatini: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4754-2494

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 09 Jan 2025 18:04
Last modified: 10 Jan 2025 03:18

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Contributors

Author: Brian C.F. Ching
Author: Johnny Downs
Author: Shuo Zhang
Author: Hannah Abdul Cader
Author: Jessica Penhallow
Author: Elvina Voraite
Author: Teodora Popnikolova
Author: Alice Wickersham
Author: Valeria Parlatini ORCID iD
Author: Emily Simonoff

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