A Cross-sectional Examination of the Association Between Parental Distress and the Well-being of Children With Neurodevelopmental Disorders During the COVID-19 Pandemic

user-605024694c775ef9a766b534(2021)

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摘要
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic and its concomitant impacts have been unevenly shared across society, this is particularly true for children with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDD), who often rely on a network of services and social connections for their well-being. Children with NDD during the COVID-19 pandemic have had worrying trends regarding their worsening well-being and poorer parental mental health. This study’s aim was to test whether these two factors were associated in a survey of Australian parents.Methods: This cross-sectional study of Australian parents of children with neurodevelopmental disorders (n = 304, ages 2 – 17, 63.8% male) sought to test the association between parental distress (as captured by the Kessler-6 distress scale) and two child outcomes, worsening NDD symptoms and worsening health behaviours (i.e., sleep, diet, exercise, and media use).Results: Parent distress was significantly associated with a worsening of symptoms of NDD and associated mental health comorbidities, and poorer child well-being. These results were significant even when including other variables of interest such as the families’ sociodemographic characteristics, indicating parental distress is a key factor for the well-being of children and parents.Conclusions: Overall, this study found relatively high levels of parental psychological distress, anxiety and poor well-being and demonstrated that parental psychological distress was significantly associated with parent-reported worsening of child diagnostic symptoms as well as poorer child well-being in relation to sleep, diet, exercise, and use of electronics. Together these findings suggest that deteriorating parental mental health (distress) due to COVID-19 is associated with adverse child mental health symptoms and well-being, as indexed by the behaviours described above.
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Pandemic,Clinical psychology,Medicine,Well-being,Association (psychology),Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19),Parental distress
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