Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children with and without affective dysregulation and their families

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Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children with and without affective dysregulation and their families. / Treier, A-K; Holas, V; Görtz-Dorten, A; Frenk, F; Goldbeck, C; Mücke, K; Hanisch, C; Ritschel, A; Roessner, V; Rothe, J; Ravens-Sieberer, U; Kaman, A; Banaschewski, T; Brandeis, D; Aggensteiner, P-M; Kölch, M; Daunke, A; Döpfner, M; ADOPT Consortium.

In: EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY, Vol. 32, No. 6, 06.2023, p. 951-961.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Treier, A-K, Holas, V, Görtz-Dorten, A, Frenk, F, Goldbeck, C, Mücke, K, Hanisch, C, Ritschel, A, Roessner, V, Rothe, J, Ravens-Sieberer, U, Kaman, A, Banaschewski, T, Brandeis, D, Aggensteiner, P-M, Kölch, M, Daunke, A, Döpfner, M & ADOPT Consortium 2023, 'Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children with and without affective dysregulation and their families', EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY, vol. 32, no. 6, pp. 951-961. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-022-02106-3

APA

Treier, A-K., Holas, V., Görtz-Dorten, A., Frenk, F., Goldbeck, C., Mücke, K., Hanisch, C., Ritschel, A., Roessner, V., Rothe, J., Ravens-Sieberer, U., Kaman, A., Banaschewski, T., Brandeis, D., Aggensteiner, P-M., Kölch, M., Daunke, A., Döpfner, M., & ADOPT Consortium (2023). Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children with and without affective dysregulation and their families. EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY, 32(6), 951-961. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00787-022-02106-3

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{11e4e458570f4a489aeb3fd18a150e47,
title = "Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children with and without affective dysregulation and their families",
abstract = "Analyzing COVID-19-related stress in children with affective dysregulation (AD) seems especially interesting, as these children typically show heightened reactivity to potential stressors and an increased use of maladaptive emotion regulation strategies. Children in out-of-home care often show similar characteristics to those with AD. Since COVID-19 has led to interruptions in psychotherapy for children with mental health problems and to potentially reduced resources to implement treatment strategies in daily life in families or in out-of-home care, these children might show a particularly strong increase in stress levels. In this study, 512 families of children without AD and 269 families of children with AD reported on COVID-19-related stress. The sample comprised screened community, clinical, and out-of-home care samples. Sociodemographic factors, characteristics of child and caregiver before the pandemic, and perceived change in external conditions due to the pandemic were examined as potential risk or protective factors. Interestingly, only small differences emerged between families of children with and without AD or between subsamples: families of children with AD and families in out-of-home care were affected slightly more, but in few domains. Improvements and deteriorations in treatment-related effects balanced each other out. Overall, the most stable and strongest risk factor for COVID-19-related stress was perceived negative change in external conditions-particularly family conditions and leisure options. Additionally, caregiver characteristics emerged as risk factors across most models. Actions to support families during the pandemic should, therefore, facilitate external conditions and focus on caregiver characteristic to reduce familial COVID-19-related stress. Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS), ADOPT Online: DRKS00014963 registered 27 June 2018, ADOPT Treatment: DRKS00013317 registered 27 September 2018, ADOPT Institution: DRKS00014581 registered 04 July 2018.",
author = "A-K Treier and V Holas and A G{\"o}rtz-Dorten and F Frenk and C Goldbeck and K M{\"u}cke and C Hanisch and A Ritschel and V Roessner and J Rothe and U Ravens-Sieberer and A Kaman and T Banaschewski and D Brandeis and P-M Aggensteiner and M K{\"o}lch and A Daunke and M D{\"o}pfner and {ADOPT Consortium}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2022. The Author(s).",
year = "2023",
month = jun,
doi = "10.1007/s00787-022-02106-3",
language = "English",
volume = "32",
pages = "951--961",
journal = "EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY",
issn = "1018-8827",
publisher = "D. Steinkopff-Verlag",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on children with and without affective dysregulation and their families

AU - Treier, A-K

AU - Holas, V

AU - Görtz-Dorten, A

AU - Frenk, F

AU - Goldbeck, C

AU - Mücke, K

AU - Hanisch, C

AU - Ritschel, A

AU - Roessner, V

AU - Rothe, J

AU - Ravens-Sieberer, U

AU - Kaman, A

AU - Banaschewski, T

AU - Brandeis, D

AU - Aggensteiner, P-M

AU - Kölch, M

AU - Daunke, A

AU - Döpfner, M

AU - ADOPT Consortium

N1 - © 2022. The Author(s).

PY - 2023/6

Y1 - 2023/6

N2 - Analyzing COVID-19-related stress in children with affective dysregulation (AD) seems especially interesting, as these children typically show heightened reactivity to potential stressors and an increased use of maladaptive emotion regulation strategies. Children in out-of-home care often show similar characteristics to those with AD. Since COVID-19 has led to interruptions in psychotherapy for children with mental health problems and to potentially reduced resources to implement treatment strategies in daily life in families or in out-of-home care, these children might show a particularly strong increase in stress levels. In this study, 512 families of children without AD and 269 families of children with AD reported on COVID-19-related stress. The sample comprised screened community, clinical, and out-of-home care samples. Sociodemographic factors, characteristics of child and caregiver before the pandemic, and perceived change in external conditions due to the pandemic were examined as potential risk or protective factors. Interestingly, only small differences emerged between families of children with and without AD or between subsamples: families of children with AD and families in out-of-home care were affected slightly more, but in few domains. Improvements and deteriorations in treatment-related effects balanced each other out. Overall, the most stable and strongest risk factor for COVID-19-related stress was perceived negative change in external conditions-particularly family conditions and leisure options. Additionally, caregiver characteristics emerged as risk factors across most models. Actions to support families during the pandemic should, therefore, facilitate external conditions and focus on caregiver characteristic to reduce familial COVID-19-related stress. Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS), ADOPT Online: DRKS00014963 registered 27 June 2018, ADOPT Treatment: DRKS00013317 registered 27 September 2018, ADOPT Institution: DRKS00014581 registered 04 July 2018.

AB - Analyzing COVID-19-related stress in children with affective dysregulation (AD) seems especially interesting, as these children typically show heightened reactivity to potential stressors and an increased use of maladaptive emotion regulation strategies. Children in out-of-home care often show similar characteristics to those with AD. Since COVID-19 has led to interruptions in psychotherapy for children with mental health problems and to potentially reduced resources to implement treatment strategies in daily life in families or in out-of-home care, these children might show a particularly strong increase in stress levels. In this study, 512 families of children without AD and 269 families of children with AD reported on COVID-19-related stress. The sample comprised screened community, clinical, and out-of-home care samples. Sociodemographic factors, characteristics of child and caregiver before the pandemic, and perceived change in external conditions due to the pandemic were examined as potential risk or protective factors. Interestingly, only small differences emerged between families of children with and without AD or between subsamples: families of children with AD and families in out-of-home care were affected slightly more, but in few domains. Improvements and deteriorations in treatment-related effects balanced each other out. Overall, the most stable and strongest risk factor for COVID-19-related stress was perceived negative change in external conditions-particularly family conditions and leisure options. Additionally, caregiver characteristics emerged as risk factors across most models. Actions to support families during the pandemic should, therefore, facilitate external conditions and focus on caregiver characteristic to reduce familial COVID-19-related stress. Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register (DRKS), ADOPT Online: DRKS00014963 registered 27 June 2018, ADOPT Treatment: DRKS00013317 registered 27 September 2018, ADOPT Institution: DRKS00014581 registered 04 July 2018.

U2 - 10.1007/s00787-022-02106-3

DO - 10.1007/s00787-022-02106-3

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 36385660

VL - 32

SP - 951

EP - 961

JO - EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY

JF - EUR CHILD ADOLES PSY

SN - 1018-8827

IS - 6

ER -