Zhang Xutong, Jambon Marc, Afifi Tracie O, Atkinson Leslie, Bennett Teresa, Duku Eric, Duncan Laura, Joshi Divya, Kimber Melissa, MacMillan Harriet L, Gonzalez Andrea
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Offord Centre for Child Studies, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Front Psychol. 2022 Jun 16;13:884591. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.884591. eCollection 2022.
Tracking parents' mental health symptoms and understanding barriers to seeking professional help are critical for determining policies and services to support families' well-being. The COVID-19 pandemic has posed enormous challenges to parents' mental health and the access to professional help, and there are important public health lessons that must be learned from the past 2 years' experiences to inform future mental health responses to social- and family-level stressful events. This study examines the trajectories of parents' depressive and anxiety symptoms over a year during the pandemic as related to their mental health help-seeking. Data were collected from a sample of parents residing in Ontario, Canada at baseline (May-June, 2020; Wave 1) and again 1 year later (Wave 2; referred to as W1 and W2 below). Parents ( = 2,439; = 39.47, = 6.65; 95.0% females) reported their depressive and anxiety symptoms at both waves. Mental health help-seeking, including self-reported contact with professional help and perceived unmet mental health needs, was measured at W2. Parents were classified into four groups by mental health help-seeking. and , both reporting perceived unmet needs for professional help, showed greater increases in depressive and anxiety symptoms, whereas parents with or showed smaller increases in depressive symptoms and decreases in anxiety symptoms. Belief in self-reliance and time constraints were the leading reasons for not seeking help. These findings suggest that over a year into the pandemic, parents with perceived unmet mental health needs were at greater risk for worsening depressive and anxiety symptoms. Recognizing the demands for mental health services when families experience chronic stressors and targeting the identified barriers may promote family well-being during and beyond this pandemic.
追踪父母的心理健康症状并了解寻求专业帮助的障碍,对于确定支持家庭福祉的政策和服务至关重要。新冠疫情给父母的心理健康以及获得专业帮助带来了巨大挑战,必须从过去两年的经历中汲取重要的公共卫生经验教训,为未来应对社会和家庭层面压力事件的心理健康措施提供参考。本研究考察了疫情期间父母抑郁和焦虑症状在一年中的变化轨迹及其与寻求心理健康帮助的关系。数据收集自加拿大安大略省的一组父母样本,在基线期(2020年5月至6月;第1波)以及一年后(第2波;以下简称W1和W2)进行。父母(n = 2439;M = 39.47,SD = 6.65;95.0%为女性)在两波调查中均报告了他们的抑郁和焦虑症状。在W2测量了寻求心理健康帮助的情况,包括自我报告的与专业帮助的接触以及感知到的未满足的心理健康需求。根据寻求心理健康帮助的情况,父母被分为四组。两组均报告感知到未满足的专业帮助需求,其抑郁和焦虑症状增加幅度更大,而有或情况的父母抑郁症状增加幅度较小,焦虑症状有所减轻。自力更生的信念和时间限制是不寻求帮助的主要原因。这些发现表明,在疫情爆发一年后,感知到未满足心理健康需求的父母出现抑郁和焦虑症状恶化的风险更高。认识到家庭在经历慢性压力源时对心理健康服务的需求,并针对已确定的障碍采取措施,可能会在本次疫情期间及之后促进家庭福祉。