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Infant externalizing behavior and parent depressive symptoms: Prospective predictors of parental pandemic related distress.

Samantha A Murray-PerdueLijuan WangE Mark CummingsJulia M Braungart-Rieker
Published in: Infancy : the official journal of the International Society on Infant Studies (2023)
Understanding predictors and effects of the COVID-19 Pandemic is a top-priority in research endeavors. The impact of COVID-19 on all components of family life and mental health cannot be overstated. This study emphasizes the need to investigate predictors of parents' responses to disaster by conceptualizing the depth of the impact of the pandemic using Bronfenbrenner's Bioecological Systems Model. We evaluate parents of infants as the center of the microsystem and discuss the importance of parents' responses to the pandemic for children's development. Specifically, utilizing a prospective design involving a sample of 105 infant-mother-father triads, we test the predictive effects of mothers' and fathers' mental health and infant externalizing behavior assessed prior to the pandemic when infants were 16-months on later pandemic related distress (PRD) approximately 1 year later. Results indicate that for both mothers and fathers, more depressive symptoms during their child's infancy predicted more PRD. Although mothers' reports of more child externalizing behavior significantly predicted more PRD, fathers' reports of externalizing were strongly, positively correlated with their concurrent depressive symptoms but not directly related to PRD. We demonstrate the importance of pre-existing mental health and parents' perceptions of their children's behavior as early as 16 months, in coping with disaster.
Keyphrases
  • mental health
  • coronavirus disease
  • sars cov
  • depressive symptoms
  • social support
  • mental illness
  • respiratory syndrome coronavirus
  • young adults
  • sleep quality
  • primary care
  • healthcare
  • emergency department
  • rectal cancer