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澳大利亚 COVID-19 大流行期间父母的主观幸福感。

Subjective wellbeing in parents during the COVID-19 pandemic in Australia.

机构信息

Deakin University, Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development, School of Psychology, Victoria, Australia; University of Melbourne, Department of Paediatrics, Victoria, Australia; La Trobe University, Judith Lumley Centre, Victoria, Australia.

Deakin University, Centre for Social and Early Emotional Development, School of Psychology, Victoria, Australia.

出版信息

J Psychosom Res. 2021 Jun;145:110482. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2021.110482. Epub 2021 Apr 1.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES

To examine (1) the subjective wellbeing of Australian parents raising children and adolescents (0-18 years) during April 2020 'stage three' COVID-19 restrictions, in comparison with parents assessed over 18-years prior to the pandemic; and (2) socio-demographic and COVID-19 predictors of subjective wellbeing during the pandemic.

METHODS

Cross-sectional data were from the COVID-19 Pandemic Adjustment Survey (CPAS, N = 2365 parents of a child 0-18 years, 8-28th April 2020); and a pre-pandemic national database containing 18 years of annual surveys collected in 2002-2019 (N = 17,529 parents).

RESULTS

Levels of subjective wellbeing during the pandemic were considerably lower than ratings prior to the pandemic (Personal Wellbeing Index, mean[SD] = 65.3 [17.0]; compared to [SD] = 75.8 [11.9], p < 0.001). During the pandemic, lower subjective wellbeing was associated with low education (adjusted regression coefficient, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] = -5.19, -0.93), language other-than-English (95% CI = -7.22, -1.30), government benefit (95% CI = -6.99, -0.96), single parents (95% CI = -8.84, -4.59), child neurodevelopmental condition (95% CI = -3.44, -0.76), parent physical/mental health problems (95% CI = -3.23, -0.67), COVID-environmental stressors (95% CI = -3.48, -2.44), and fear/worry about COVID-19 (95% CI = -8.13, -5.96). Unexpectedly, parent engagement with news media about the pandemic was associated with higher subjective wellbeing (95% CI = 0.35, 1.61).

CONCLUSION

Subjective wellbeing in parents raising children aged 0-18 years appears to be disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and restrictions in Australia. Specific at-risk groups, for which government intervention may be warranted, include parents in socially disadvantaged contexts, parents with pre-existing mental health difficulties, and parents facing significant COVID-19-related work changes.

摘要

目的

(1)在 2020 年 4 月澳大利亚 COVID-19 疫情“第三阶段”限制期间,调查抚养 0-18 岁儿童和青少年的澳大利亚父母的主观幸福感,并与疫情前评估的父母进行比较;(2)分析疫情期间父母主观幸福感的社会人口学和 COVID-19 预测因素。

方法

横断面数据来自 COVID-19 大流行调整调查(CPAS,2020 年 4 月 8 日至 28 日,2365 名 0-18 岁儿童的父母)和一个包含 18 年年度调查的全国数据库,这些调查是在 2002-2019 年收集的(N=17529 名父母)。

结果

疫情期间的主观幸福感水平明显低于疫情前的评分(个人幸福感指数,平均值[标准差] = 65.3[17.0];相比之下,[标准差] = 75.8[11.9],p<0.001)。在疫情期间,较低的主观幸福感与低教育程度(调整后的回归系数,95%置信区间[95%CI] =-5.19,-0.93)、非英语语言(95%CI=-7.22,-1.30)、政府福利(95%CI=-6.99,-0.96)、单亲家庭(95%CI=-8.84,-4.59)、儿童神经发育状况(95%CI=-3.44,-0.76)、父母身心健康问题(95%CI=-3.23,-0.67)、COVID-19 环境压力源(95%CI=-3.48,-2.44)以及对 COVID-19 的恐惧/担忧(95%CI=-8.13,-5.96)有关。出乎意料的是,父母与疫情相关的新闻媒体的互动与较高的主观幸福感相关(95%CI=0.35,1.61)。

结论

0-18 岁儿童的父母的主观幸福感似乎受到澳大利亚 COVID-19 疫情和限制的不成比例的影响。需要政府干预的特定高危群体包括社会劣势背景的父母、有先前心理健康问题的父母以及面临重大 COVID-19 相关工作变化的父母。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/4e6f/9750621/a395340d2031/gr1_lrg.jpg

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