Back to Search Start Over

Parental psychological distress associated with COVID-19 outbreak: A large-scale multicenter survey from Turkey.

Authors :
Bıkmazer, Alperen
Kadak, Muhammed Tayyib
Görmez, Vahdet
Doğan, Uğur
Aslankaya, Zeynep Dilara
Bakır, Fulya
Tarakçıoğlu, Mahmut Cem
Kaya, İlyas
Gümüş, Yusuf Yasin
Esin, İbrahim Selçuk
Karayağmurlu, Ali
Adak, İbrahim
Yaylacı, Ferhat
Güller, Barış
Tanır, Yaşar
Koyuncu, Zehra
Serdengeçti, Nihal
Ermiş, Çağatay
Kaçmaz, Gül Bilgin
Gülşen, Hatice
Source :
International Journal of Social Psychiatry. Sep2021, Vol. 67 Issue 6, p696-704. 9p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Aims: Pandemics can cause substantial psychological distress; however, we do not know the impact of the COVID-19 related lockdown and mental health burden on the parents of school age children. We aimed to comparatively examine the COVID-19 related the stress and psychological burden of the parents with different occupational, locational, and mental health status related backgrounds. Methods: A large-scale multicenter online survey was completed by the parents (n = 3,278) of children aged 6 to 18 years, parents with different occupational (health care workers—HCW [18.2%] vs. others), geographical (İstanbul [38.2%] vs. others), and psychiatric (child with a mental disorder [37.8%]) backgrounds. Results: Multivariable logistic regression analysis showed that being a HCW parent (odds ratio 1.79, p <.001), a mother (odds ratio 1.67, p <.001), and a younger parent (odds ratio 0.98, p =.012); living with an adult with a chronic physical illness (odds ratio 1.38, p <.001), having an acquaintance diagnosed with COVID-19 (odds ratio 1.22, p =.043), positive psychiatric history (odds ratio 1.29, p <.001), and living with a child with moderate or high emotional distress (odds ratio 1.29, p <.001; vs. odds ratio 2.61, p <.001) were independently associated with significant parental distress. Conclusions: Parents report significant psychological distress associated with COVID-19 pandemic and further research is needed to investigate its wider impact including on the whole family unit. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00207640
Volume :
67
Issue :
6
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
International Journal of Social Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155052816
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0020764020970240