School of Clinical Medicine, UNSW Medicine and Health, UNSW Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Behavioural Sciences Unit, Kids Cancer Centre, Sydney Children's Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
PLoS One. 2022 Sep 1;17(9):e0273622. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0273622. eCollection 2022.
For over two years, the global COVID-19 pandemic has forced major transformations on health, social, and educational systems, with concomitant impacts on mental health. This study aimed to understand the unique and additional challenges faced by children with chronic illness and their families during the COVID-19 era.
Parents of children receiving treatment for a chronic illness within the neurology, cancer, renal and respiratory clinics of Sydney Children's Hospital were invited to participate. We used qualitative methodology, including a semi-structured interview guide, verbatim transcription, and thematic analysis supported by QSR NVivo.
Thirteen parents of children receiving tertiary-level care, for nine chronic illnesses, participated. Parents reported intense fears relating to their ill child's additional vulnerabilities, which included their risk of developing severe COVID-19 disease and the potential impact of COVID-19-related disruptions to accessing clinical care, medications, allied health support and daily care protocols should their parent contract COVID-19. Parents perceived telehealth as a highly convenient and preferred method for ongoing management of less complex healthcare needs. Parents reported that the accrual of additional stressors and responsibilities during the pandemic, experienced in combination with restricted social interaction and reduced access to usual support networks was detrimental to their own mental health. Hospital-based visitation restrictions reduced emotional support, coping, and resilience for both parents and children and in some cases led to marital discord, sibling distress, and financial loss. Supportive factors included increased time spent together at home during the pandemic and improved hygiene practices at school, which dramatically reduced the incidence of non-COVID-19-related communicable illnesses in chronically ill children.
For families caring for a chronically ill child, COVID-19 made a difficult situation harder. The pandemic has highlighted the need for targeted psychosocial intervention for vulnerable families, to mitigate current mental health burden and prevent chronic psychological distress.
在过去的两年中,全球 COVID-19 大流行迫使卫生、社会和教育系统发生重大变革,同时对心理健康产生影响。本研究旨在了解患有慢性疾病的儿童及其家庭在 COVID-19 时代面临的独特和额外挑战。
邀请悉尼儿童医院神经病学、癌症、肾脏和呼吸科接受慢性疾病治疗的儿童的父母参加。我们使用定性方法,包括半结构化访谈指南、逐字转录和主题分析,并得到 QSR NVivo 的支持。
共有 13 名接受三级护理的儿童的父母参加,他们患有九种慢性疾病。父母报告说,他们对孩子的额外脆弱性感到强烈恐惧,这些脆弱性包括他们患严重 COVID-19 疾病的风险,以及 COVID-19 相关的医疗保健中断对他们的影响,包括药物、联合健康支持和日常护理协议,他们的父母如果感染 COVID-19。父母认为远程医疗是管理较简单医疗需求的高度方便和首选方法。父母报告说,在大流行期间,额外的压力源和责任的积累,与社交互动受限和减少获得通常的支持网络相结合,对他们自己的心理健康有害。医院探视限制减少了父母和孩子的情感支持、应对能力和适应能力,在某些情况下导致婚姻不和、兄弟姐妹困扰和经济损失。支持性因素包括大流行期间在家中度过的时间增加,以及学校卫生习惯的改善,这大大减少了慢性疾病儿童中非 COVID-19 相关传染病的发病率。
对于照顾慢性疾病儿童的家庭来说,COVID-19 使原本困难的情况更加艰难。大流行凸显了为弱势家庭提供有针对性的社会心理干预的必要性,以减轻当前的心理健康负担并预防慢性心理困扰。