A longitudinal study of child adjustment during the COVID-19 pandemic: the protective role of the parent-child relationship in middle childhood.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2024

This longitudinal study assessed how parent-child relationship quality during the first COVID-19 lockdown was related to changes in internalizing, externalizing, and sleep problems during the first months of the pandemic: during lockdown, partial deconfinement, and total deconfinement. Participants included 167 children (9-12 year) and their parents recruited in the province of Quebec, Canada. Child behavior problems decreased between lockdown and the two deconfinement assessments, but more sleep and behavior problems were associated with lower levels of relationship quality (more conflict, less closeness, and more insecure attachment). Significant interaction effects showed that changes in externalizing and sleep problems varied as a function of parent-child relationship. Results support the critical importance of the parent-child relationship with regard to child adjustment in middle childhood in times of crisis such as a pandemic. They also highlight resilience in children aged 9 to 12, with a decrease in problems over time.

Concepts Keywords
12year Adaptation, Psychological
Canada attachment
Pandemic Child
Parents Child Behavior
Sleep COVID-19
COVID-19 lockdown
externalizing
Female
Humans
internalizing
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Object Attachment
Parent-Child Relations
parent-child relationship
Quebec
SARS-CoV-2
sleep
Sleep Wake Disorders

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic
disease IDO quality
disease VO Canada
disease VO time
disease IDO object
disease MESH Sleep Wake Disorders

Original Article

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