The Association between School Closures and Child Mental Health during COVID-19

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Abstract

Importance: In-person schooling has been disrupted for most school-aged youth during the COVID-19 pandemic, with low-income, Black, and Hispanic populations most likely to receive fully remote instruction. Disruptions to in-person schooling may have negatively and inequitably affected children's mental health. Objective: To estimate the association between school closures and child mental health outcomes and how it varies across sociodemographic factors. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional population-based survey study included a nationally representative sample of US adults aged 18 to 64 years with at least 1 child in the household. The survey was administered between December 2 and December 21, 2020, via web and telephone in English and Spanish. Participants were recruited from the NORC AmeriSpeak panel, an address-based panel with known probability sampling and coverage of 97% of US households. Exposures: Schooling modality (in person, fully remote, or hybrid), household income, age. Main Outcomes and Measures: Child mental health difficulties were measured with the parent-report version of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, with small, medium, and large effect sizes defined as 1.3-, 3.3-, and 5.2-point differences, respectively. Results: A total of 2324 adults completed the survey. Overall, 1671 respondents (71.9%) were women, 244 (10.5%) were Black, 372 (16.0%) were Hispanic, and 421 (18.1%) had a high school education or less. Children attending school in-person had higher household incomes (mean difference, $9719; 95% CI, $4327 to $15111; P

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Hawrilenko, M., Kroshus, E., Tandon, P., & Christakis, D. (2021). The Association between School Closures and Child Mental Health during COVID-19. JAMA Network Open, 4(9). https://doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.24092

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