Thomeer Mieke Beth, Brantley Mia, Reczek Rin
The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA.
North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2024 Dec;65(4):539-557. doi: 10.1177/00221465241230505. Epub 2024 Feb 26.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, parents experienced difficulties around employment and children's schooling, likely with detrimental mental health implications. We analyze National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 data (N = 2,829) to estimate depressive symptom changes from 2019 to 2021 by paid work status and children's schooling modality, considering partnership status, gender, and race-ethnicity differences. We draw on cumulative disadvantage theory alongside strained advantage theory to test whether mental health declines were steeper for parents with more disadvantaged statuses or for parents with more advantaged statuses. Parents with work disruptions, without paid work, or with children in remote school experienced the greatest increases in depressive symptoms, with steepest increases among single parents without paid work and single parents with children in remote school (cumulative disadvantage), fathers without paid work (strained advantage), and White parents with remote school (strained advantage). We discuss the uneven impacts of the pandemic on mental health and implications for long-term health disparities.
在新冠疫情期间,父母们在就业和孩子上学方面遇到困难,这可能对心理健康产生不利影响。我们分析了1997年全国青年纵向调查数据(N = 2829),以根据就业状况和孩子的上学方式,估计2019年至2021年期间的抑郁症状变化,同时考虑伴侣状况、性别和种族差异。我们运用累积劣势理论和紧张优势理论,来检验处于更不利地位的父母或处于更有利地位的父母,其心理健康下降幅度是否更大。工作中断、没有带薪工作或孩子接受远程教学的父母,其抑郁症状增加最多,其中没有带薪工作的单亲父母以及孩子接受远程教学的单亲父母(累积劣势)、没有带薪工作的父亲(紧张优势)以及孩子接受远程教学的白人父母(紧张优势)的症状增加最为明显。我们讨论了疫情对心理健康的不均衡影响以及对长期健康差距的影响。