Department of Criminology, Malmo University, Malmo, Sweden
Department of Psychology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden.
BMJ Open. 2024 Mar 12;14(3):e077396. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-077396.
This study used causal inference to estimate the longitudinal effects of contagion in cohabitants and family members on university students' mental health and academic self-efficacy during the COVID-19 pandemic.
A prospective longitudinal study including a baseline online measurement in May 2020, and online follow-ups after 5 months and 10 months. Participants were recruited through open-access online advertising.
Public universities and university colleges in Sweden.
The analytical sample included 2796 students.
Contagion in cohabitants and in family members was assessed at baseline and at the 5-month follow-up. Mental health and academic self-efficacy were assessed at the 5-month and 10-month follow-ups.
Mild symptoms reported in cohabitants at baseline resulted in negative mental health effects at follow-up 5 months later, and mild baseline symptoms in family members resulted in negative effects on academic self-efficacy at follow-ups both 5 and 10 months later.
Notwithstanding the lack of precision in estimated effects, the findings emphasise the importance of social relationships and the challenges of providing students with sufficient support in times of crisis.
本研究采用因果推理方法,估计在 COVID-19 大流行期间,同居者和家庭成员之间的感染对大学生心理健康和学业自我效能的纵向影响。
一项前瞻性纵向研究,包括 2020 年 5 月的基线在线测量,以及 5 个月和 10 个月后的在线随访。参与者通过开放获取的在线广告招募。
瑞典的公立大学和大学学院。
分析样本包括 2796 名学生。
同居者和家庭成员的感染在基线和 5 个月随访时进行评估。心理健康和学业自我效能在 5 个月和 10 个月随访时进行评估。
基线时报告的同居者轻度症状导致随访 5 个月后心理健康状况恶化,而基线时家庭成员轻度症状则导致随访 5 个月和 10 个月后学业自我效能下降。
尽管估计效果的精度不高,但这些发现强调了社会关系的重要性,以及在危机时期为学生提供足够支持的挑战。