1. Easing pandemic-related restrictions, easing psychosocial stress factors in families with infants and toddlers? Cross-sectional results of the three wave CoronabaBY study from Germany.
- Author
-
Friedmann, Anna, Buechel, Catherine, Seifert, Clara, Eber, Stefan, Mall, Volker, and Nehring, Ina
- Subjects
FAMILIES & psychology ,STATISTICS ,ANALYSIS of variance ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,CROSS-sectional method ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,MENTAL health ,PARENTING ,PSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,CHI-squared test ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESEARCH funding ,MENTAL depression ,DATA analysis software ,DATA analysis ,ANXIETY ,COVID-19 pandemic ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress - Abstract
Background: Families with young children are particularly vulnerable for the stressors induced by the COVID-19 pandemic. However, studies on their psychosocial situation during the course of the crisis are still sparse. Methods: In a comparison of three survey waves (wave I and III = high COVID-19 incidences), we cross-sectionally investigated the proportion of families (N
total = 2940) with children aged 0–3 years experiencing pandemic burden, parenting stress, and parental and child mental health problems in relation to COVID-19 incidences and restrictions in Southern Germany via validated questionnaires. Potential influencing factors were also explored. Results: The number of parents with a high pandemic burden decreased over the course of the pandemic with a peak of 65.3% in wave I (significant changes except wave II versus III). Participants with high parenting stress significantly increased from 38.2% in wave I to 51.2% in wave III. The number of parents with symptoms of depression and anxiety remained constantly high with a maximum of 28.4% being affected. Infants with crying/sleeping problems increased significantly from 26.4% in wave I to 35.5% in wave III. Toddlers' emotional and behavioral problems showed a peak of 23.9% in wave III (no significant changes). Increased family conflicts were the strongest predictor for parenting stress (ß = 0.355), maternal (ß = 0.305), infants' (ß = 0.149) and toddlers' (ß = 0.216) mental health problems during the pandemic. Conclusions: Psychosocial stress factors in families with infants and toddlers remained highly pronounced and even partly increased irrespective of pandemic events. The findings suggest a staggered negative impact of pandemic-related factors on young children's mental health. Promoting infants' mental health as well as strengthening parental resources by reducing parenting stress should be a top healthcare priority in the aftermath of COVID-19. Trial registration The study was pre-registered in OSF (https://osf.io/search/?q=tksh5&page=1) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF