Tamla Rai Vijaya, Laestadius Linnea Irina, Campos-Castillo Celeste
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT, USA.
Joseph J. Zilber College of Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health. 2024 Jul 13;18(1):83. doi: 10.1186/s13034-024-00773-5.
While minoritized ethnoracial groups were most likely to be in online learning during the COVID-19 pandemic, the impact of these ethnoracial disparities on adolescent mental health is unclear. Since past studies do not directly examine whether the association between school modality and self-reported mental health outcomes varied by race and ethnicity among U.S. adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic, this study addresses the gap.
Adolescents aged 13 to 17 years old (n = 510) were surveyed for self-reports of anxiety and depression symptoms using the 4-item Patient Health Questionnaire during Spring 2021. Seemingly unrelated regressions were used to estimate the differential association between school modality and mental health by respondents' race and ethnicity.
Estimates without interaction between school modality and race and ethnicity suggested that Latino respondents reported a significantly higher frequency of depressive symptoms than their White counterparts (b = 0.459; p < 0.05). Similarly, the estimates without the interaction suggested respondents reporting hybrid learning had a higher frequency of depressive symptoms than in-person learning (b = 0.504; p < 0.05). Estimates with interaction between school modality and race and ethnicity suggested fully online learning was associated with poorer mental health only among White respondents and better mental health among Black respondents. Among adolescents attending school fully online, Black adolescents reported fewer mental health symptoms than their White counterparts (anxiety, b =- 1.364; p < 0.05, and depression, b =- 1.647; p < 0.05).
Fully online learning may have benefitted the mental health of Black adolescents during the COVID-19 pandemic, perhaps because it buffered racial discrimination and social anxiety in schools. Additional interventions should be explored to promote in-person school environments that better support the mental health of Black adolescents. Moreover, prioritizing equitable access to broadband internet will provide better access to online learning and ensure positive mental health, particularly for adolescents from minoritized ethnoracial groups during instances of future pandemics. Future research should continue to consider the race and ethnicity of adolescents to promote mental well-being in schools across learning modalities.
在新冠疫情期间,少数族裔群体最有可能参与在线学习,但这些种族差异对青少年心理健康的影响尚不清楚。由于过去的研究没有直接考察在新冠疫情期间,美国青少年中学校学习模式与自我报告的心理健康结果之间的关联是否因种族和民族而异,本研究填补了这一空白。
在2021年春季,对13至17岁的青少年(n = 510)进行了调查,使用4项患者健康问卷对焦虑和抑郁症状进行自我报告。采用看似不相关的回归方法,按受访者的种族和民族估计学校学习模式与心理健康之间的差异关联。
学校学习模式与种族和民族之间无交互作用的估计表明,拉丁裔受访者报告的抑郁症状频率明显高于白人受访者(b = 0.459;p < 0.05)。同样,无交互作用的估计表明,报告混合学习的受访者抑郁症状频率高于面授学习(b = 0.504;p < 0.05)。学校学习模式与种族和民族之间有交互作用的估计表明,完全在线学习仅与白人受访者心理健康较差相关,而与黑人受访者心理健康较好相关。在完全在线上学的青少年中,黑人青少年报告的心理健康症状少于白人青少年(焦虑,b = -1.364;p < 0.05;抑郁,b = -1.647;p < 0.05)。
在新冠疫情期间,完全在线学习可能对黑人青少年的心理健康有益,这可能是因为它缓解了学校中的种族歧视和社交焦虑。应探索额外的干预措施,以促进能更好支持黑人青少年心理健康的面授学校环境。此外,优先确保宽带互联网的公平接入将提供更好的在线学习机会,并确保良好的心理健康,特别是在未来疫情期间,对于来自少数族裔群体的青少年而言。未来的研究应继续考虑青少年的种族和民族,以促进不同学习模式下学校中的心理健康。