Patterns and predictors of adolescent life change during the COVID-19 pandemic: a person-centered approach

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Abstract

The present study investigated patterns of adolescent life changes across multiple life domains and utilized a holistic-interactionistic perspective to examine their individual, familial, and societal correlates with a sample of 2544 Chinese parent-adolescent dyads. Adolescents were aged from 10 to 19 years old (50.16% girls). Latent profile analysis revealed five life change profiles, including three improved profiles at various degrees, one unchanged profile, and one worsened profile. The majority of adolescents had an improved or unchanged life. Multinomial logistic regression analyses found that most of the individual, familial, and societal factors predicted the group memberships. Notably, parent-adolescent conflict was a significant factor that predicted memberships of all patterns. These findings show the resilience of adolescents and indicate the need for policies and interventions that consider the holistic nature of adolescents’ person-context system, especially during a global crisis such as the COVID-19 pandemic.

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Shen, J., Sun, R., Xu, J., Dai, Y., Li, W., Liu, H., & Fang, X. (2023). Patterns and predictors of adolescent life change during the COVID-19 pandemic: a person-centered approach. Current Psychology, 42(3), 2514–2528. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-021-02204-6

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