Department of Psychology, University of Maine.
Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol. 2023 Sep 3;52(5):702-715. doi: 10.1080/15374416.2022.2042697. Epub 2022 Mar 8.
Widespread concern exists about the impacts of COVID-19 and related public health safety measures (e.g., school closures) on adolescent mental health. Emerging research documents correlates and trajectories of adolescent distress, but further work is needed to identify additional vulnerability factors that explain increased psychopathology during the pandemic. The current study examined whether COVID-19-related loneliness and health anxiety (assessed in March 2020) predicted increased depressive symptoms, frequency of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI), and suicide risk from pre-pandemic (late January/early February 2020) to June 2020.
Participants were 362 middle and high school adolescents in rural Maine ( age = 15.01 years; 63.4% female; 76.4% White). Data were collected during a time in which state-level COVID-19 restrictions were high and case counts were relatively low. Self-reports assessed psychopathology symptoms, and ecological momentary assessment (EMA) was used to capture COVID-19-related distress during the initial days of school closures.
Loneliness predicted higher depressive symptoms for all adolescents, higher NSSI frequency for adolescents with low pre-pandemic frequency (but less frequent NSSI for adolescents with high pre-pandemic frequency), and higher suicide risk for adolescents with higher pre-pandemic risk. Health anxiety predicted higher NSSI frequency for adolescents with high pre-pandemic frequency, and secondary analyses suggested that this pattern may depend on adolescents' gender identity.
Results underscore the impact of COVID-19 on adolescent mental health, with benefits for some but largely negative impacts for most. Implications for caretakers, educators, and clinicians invested in adolescent mental health are discussed.
人们普遍担心 COVID-19 及其相关公共卫生安全措施(例如学校停课)对青少年心理健康的影响。新出现的研究文献记录了青少年痛苦的相关性和轨迹,但需要进一步的工作来确定更多的脆弱性因素,以解释在大流行期间增加的精神病理学。本研究考察了 COVID-19 相关的孤独感和健康焦虑(在 2020 年 3 月评估)是否预测了从大流行前(2020 年 1 月下旬/2 月初)到 2020 年 6 月期间抑郁症状、非自杀性自我伤害(NSSI)的频率和自杀风险的增加。
参与者是缅因州农村地区的 362 名中学生和高中生(年龄= 15.01 岁;63.4%女性;76.4%白人)。数据采集于州级 COVID-19 限制措施较高、病例数相对较低的时期。自我报告评估了精神病理学症状,生态瞬时评估(EMA)用于捕捉学校停课初始几天的 COVID-19 相关痛苦。
孤独感预测所有青少年的抑郁症状更高,低大流行前频率的青少年 NSSI 频率更高(但大流行前频率较高的青少年 NSSI 频率较低),高大流行前风险的青少年自杀风险更高。健康焦虑预测了大流行前频率较高的青少年 NSSI 频率更高,而二次分析表明这种模式可能取决于青少年的性别认同。
研究结果强调了 COVID-19 对青少年心理健康的影响,对一些人有益,但对大多数人影响大多是负面的。讨论了对关心青少年心理健康的看护者、教育者和临床医生的影响。