Intensive Care Unit, Department of Pediatrics and Pediatric Surgery, Erasmus Medical Centre, Sophia Children's Hospital, PO box 2060, 3000 CB, Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
Amsterdam UMC, Location University of Amsterdam, Emma Children's Hospital, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry & Psychosocial Care, Amsterdam Reproduction and Development, Amsterdam Public Health, Meibergdreef 9, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jun 3;22(1):1106. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13544-8.
The COVID-19 pandemic has inevitably affected children and their families. This study examines the impact of the COVID-19 measures in children with chronic somatic conditions (CSC) and their parents and compares them with a Dutch general population sample.
We included a sample of children with CSC (0-18 years, n = 326) and compared them with children (8-18 years, n = 1,287) from the Dutch general population. Perceived stress, coping, social interaction with friends and family, physical activity, eating behavior, family support, parenting perception, and financial situation were assessed once with the self-reported and parent-reported COVID-19 child check questionnaire, between November 2020 and May 2021. Comparisons between the two samples were made by using t-tests and chi square tests.
The proportion of children who reported being less physically active and having less social interaction with friends since the COVID-19 pandemic was higher in children with CSC than in children from the general population. Children with CSC and their parents experienced less stress than children and parents from the general population. Moreover, parents of children with CSC aged 0-7 years and parents of children aged 8-18 years from the general population experienced less support and more financial deterioration than parents of children with CSC aged 8-18 years. In the parents from the general population only, this deteriorated financial situation was associated with more stress, worse family interaction and parenting perception, and less received support.
The impact of COVID-19 on children with CSC and their parents differed from those in the general population. Addressing the collateral damage of COVID-19 measures in children and their families may give direction to policy and potentially prevent lifelong impact.
COVID-19 大流行不可避免地影响了儿童及其家庭。本研究考察了 COVID-19 措施对患有慢性躯体疾病(CSC)的儿童及其父母的影响,并将其与荷兰一般人群样本进行了比较。
我们纳入了一组患有 CSC(0-18 岁,n=326)的儿童,并将其与荷兰一般人群中(8-18 岁,n=1,287)的儿童进行了比较。使用自我报告和父母报告的 COVID-19 儿童检查问卷,于 2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 5 月期间,评估了一次儿童及其父母的压力感知、应对方式、与朋友和家人的社交互动、体力活动、饮食行为、家庭支持、育儿认知和经济状况。通过 t 检验和卡方检验比较了两个样本之间的差异。
与一般人群中的儿童相比,患有 CSC 的儿童报告自 COVID-19 大流行以来体力活动减少和与朋友社交互动减少的比例更高。患有 CSC 的儿童及其父母的压力感知低于一般人群中的儿童和父母。此外,0-7 岁患有 CSC 儿童的父母和一般人群中 8-18 岁儿童的父母的支持感较少,经济状况恶化更严重,而 8-18 岁患有 CSC 儿童的父母则没有。仅在一般人群中,这种经济状况恶化与压力增加、家庭互动和育儿认知恶化以及支持减少有关。
COVID-19 对患有 CSC 的儿童及其父母的影响与一般人群不同。解决 COVID-19 措施对儿童及其家庭的附带损害可能为政策提供方向,并有可能预防终身影响。