Parental psychosocial factors predicting adolescents' psychological adjustment during the surging and remission periods of COVID-19 in China: A longitudinal study.

Yuting Li, Xinxin Huang, Jianyin Qiu, Chunbo Li, Zhuoying Zhu, Yifeng Xu
Author Information
  1. Yuting Li: Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
  2. Xinxin Huang: Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
  3. Jianyin Qiu: Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
  4. Chunbo Li: Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
  5. Zhuoying Zhu: Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China. Electronic address: zhuzhuoying@smhc.org.cn.
  6. Yifeng Xu: Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China. Electronic address: xuyifeng@smhc.org.cn.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Parents play a critical role in adolescents' psychological adjustment, especially in stress response. Few studies have investigated parental impact on adolescents' psychological adjustment in the pandemic. The longitudinal study examined how parental psychosocial factors at the surging period of the pandemic (T1) in China predicted adolescents' anxiety and depression concurrently and at the remission periods three (T2) and six months (T3) later.
METHODS: Middle and high school students and their parents from three schools in Shanghai, China, completed online surveys on March 10, 2020 (T1), June 16, 2020 (T2), and Sep 25, 2020 (T3). Adolescents' anxiety/depression levels were assessed by matching self- and parent-reports at T1, T2, T3, and parents reported their psychological state (emotion and psychopathology), pandemic response (appraisal and coping), and perceived social support (PSS) at T1.
RESULTS: Parental positive/negative emotions, anxiety, depression, control-appraisal, forward- and trauma-focus coping style and PSS were all significantly related to their children's anxiety/depression at T1. All factors, except coping style, predicted adolescents' anxiety/depression at T2 and T3, even after controlling for T1 adjustment levels. Parental positive emotion and depression had the strongest impact on adolescents' adjustment.
LIMITATIONS: Some participants didn't complete the surveys at later time points, and the participants were only recruited in Shanghai.
CONCLUSIONS: The study found that parents' psychosocial factors played a pivotal role on adolescents' psychological adjustment during COVID-19, highlighting the need to provide help to parents who were suffering from potential psychological distress.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Humans
Adolescent
Child
Emotional Adjustment
Parent-Child Relations
Longitudinal Studies
COVID-19
China
Parents

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0adolescents'psychologicaladjustmentT1factorsT2T3pandemicstudypsychosocialdepressionparents2020anxiety/depressioncopingParentalCOVID-19roleresponseparentalimpactlongitudinalsurgingChinapredictedanxietyremissionperiodsthreelaterShanghaisurveyslevelsemotionPSSstyleparticipantsBACKGROUND:ParentsplaycriticalespeciallystressstudiesinvestigatedexaminedperiodconcurrentlysixmonthsMETHODS:MiddlehighschoolstudentsschoolscompletedonlineMarch10June16Sep25Adolescents'assessedmatchingself-parent-reportsreportedstatepsychopathologyappraisalperceivedsocialsupportRESULTS:positive/negativeemotionscontrol-appraisalforward-trauma-focussignificantlyrelatedchildren'sexceptevencontrollingpositivestrongestLIMITATIONS:completetimepointsrecruitedCONCLUSIONS:foundparents'playedpivotalhighlightingneedprovidehelpsufferingpotentialdistresspredictingChina:AdolescentAppraisalCopingEmotionPsychopathology

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