Green Michael J, Craig Peter, Demou Evangelia, Katikireddi S Vittal, Leyland Alastair H, Pearce Anna
MRC/CSO Social & Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Clarice Pears Building, 90 Byres Road, Glasgow, UK.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, USA.
Ann Gen Psychiatry. 2023 Jun 6;22(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s12991-023-00454-1.
The COVID-19 pandemic increased psychiatric distress and impacts differed by family structure. We aimed to identify mechanisms contributing to these inequalities.
Survey data were from the UK Household Longitudinal Study. Psychiatric distress (GHQ-12) was measured in April 2020 (first UK lockdown; n = 10,516), and January 2021 (lockdown re-introduced following eased restrictions; n = 6,893). Pre-lockdown family structure comprised partner status and presence of children (< 16 years). Mediating mechanisms included: active employment, financial strain, childcare/home-schooling, caring, and loneliness. Monte Carlo g-computation simulations were used to adjust for confounding and estimate total effects and decompositions into: controlled direct effects (effects if the mediator was absent), and portions eliminated (PE; representing differential exposure and vulnerability to the mediator).
In January 2021, after adjustment, we estimated increased risk of distress among couples with children compared to couples with no children (RR: 1.48; 95% CI 1.15-1.82), largely because of childcare/home-schooling (PE RR: 1.32; 95% CI 1.00-1.64). Single respondents without children also had increased risk of distress compared to couples with no children (RR: 1.55; 95% CI 1.27-1.83), and the largest PE was for loneliness (RR: 1.16; 95% CI 1.05-1.27), though financial strain contributed (RR: 1.05; 95% CI 0.99-1.12). Single parents demonstrated the highest levels of distress, but confounder adjustment suggested uncertain effects with wide confidence intervals. Findings were similar in April 2020 and when stratified by sex.
Access to childcare/schooling, financial security and social connection are important mechanisms that need addressing to avoid widening mental health inequalities during public health crises.
新冠疫情加剧了精神痛苦,且影响因家庭结构而异。我们旨在确定导致这些不平等现象的机制。
调查数据来自英国住户纵向研究。在2020年4月(英国首次封锁;n = 10516)和2021年1月(放松限制后重新实施封锁;n = 6893)测量了精神痛苦(一般健康问卷-12项)。封锁前的家庭结构包括伴侣状况和是否有16岁以下子女。中介机制包括:在职就业、经济压力、儿童保育/家庭教育、照料和孤独感。采用蒙特卡洛g计算模拟来调整混杂因素,并估计总效应以及分解为:控制直接效应(如果不存在中介因素时的效应)和消除部分(PE;代表对中介因素的不同暴露和易感性)。
在2021年1月,调整后,我们估计有子女的夫妻相比无子女的夫妻精神痛苦风险增加(风险比:1.48;95%置信区间1.15 - 1.82),主要是由于儿童保育/家庭教育(PE风险比:1.32;95%置信区间1.00 - 1.64)。与无子女的夫妻相比,无子女的单身受访者精神痛苦风险也增加(风险比:1.55;95%置信区间1.27 - 1.83),最大的PE是孤独感(风险比:1.16;95%置信区间1.05 - 1.27),不过经济压力也有影响(风险比:1.05;95%置信区间0.99 - 1.12)。单亲父母表现出最高水平的精神痛苦,但混杂因素调整表明效应不确定,置信区间较宽。在2020年4月以及按性别分层时,结果类似。
获得儿童保育/教育、经济保障和社会联系是重要机制,在公共卫生危机期间需要加以解决,以避免心理健康不平等现象加剧。