Salmon Karen
School of Psychology, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
J Appl Res Mem Cogn. 2021 Dec;10(4):564-576. doi: 10.1016/j.jarmac.2021.11.002. Epub 2021 Nov 23.
The consequences of profound disruption to everyday life caused by the COVID-19 pandemic will only emerge over time. Guided by ecological systems (Pitchik et al., 2021) and developmental psychopathology (Masten & Cicchetti, 2010) frameworks, I review evidence that points to parents at home with children as particularly vulnerable to increased psychological difficulties, particularly in contexts of poverty. Resultant compromised parenting may reduce children's opportunities for the kinds of everyday interactions that promote cognitive and socioemotional development and expose them to increases in coercive, avoidant, and other problematic caregiving behaviours. I discuss three evidence-based strategies that parents could adopt to buffer their child's mental health: building positive discipline strategies, talking with the child about the pandemic and its consequences, and conversing about the past. I conclude, however, that approaches to supporting parents and their children at this time must also address multisystem factors that compromise caregivers' ability to provide nurturing care.
由新冠疫情对日常生活造成的深远破坏所带来的后果,只会随着时间的推移逐渐显现出来。在生态系统(皮奇克等人,2021年)和发展心理病理学(马斯滕和西契蒂,2010年)框架的指导下,我审视了相关证据,这些证据表明,与孩子一起待在家里的父母特别容易出现更多心理问题,尤其是在贫困环境中。由此导致的育儿能力受损可能会减少孩子进行促进认知和社会情感发展的日常互动的机会,并使他们面临更多强制、回避及其他有问题的育儿行为。我讨论了父母可以采用的三种基于证据的策略,以缓冲孩子的心理健康:建立积极的纪律策略、与孩子谈论疫情及其后果、以及聊聊过去。然而,我得出的结论是,此时支持父母及其子女的方法还必须解决那些损害照顾者提供关爱能力的多系统因素。