A Qualitative Study of Child and Adolescent Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ireland
Abstract
:1. Introduction
The Psychological Impact of Covid-19 on Children and Adolescents
2. Method
2.1. Participants
2.2. Design
2.3. Procedure
2.4. Data Analysis
- Reading/Re-reading—The research team familiarise themselves with the interview concept by immersing themselves with the transcript.
- Coding—The research team identify codes and organise them into initial themes.
- Clustering—Themes are emerged by common themes and subthemes.
- Iteration—The iterative process involves several revisions, including checking themes, subthemes, and quotes.
- Narration—The research theme develops a narrative based on the findings. The narration process involves describing the themes and using quotes to illustrate them.
- Contextualisation—The researchers interpret the findings within the context of existing literature.
3. Results
3.1. Children Have Borne the Brunt of Covid-19
“My conclusion is that children have borne the brunt of this.”(Parent)
“My conclusion is that the children have taken, have borne the brunt of this. Really, you know they didn’t…have much to go on and my biggest point and the reason I really wanted to participate in this study is because a 9-year-old and a 7-year-old are not able to talk like we’re able to talk over a zoom call. It’s just it’s just not. I don’t think they’re neurologically mature enough, I know they’re digital natives, but I don’t think they have the capacity to learn or communicate across digital platforms.”(Parent)
“Yeah, I think that kills them the most with not having any social time, not seeing their schoolmates.” (Parent) “And you know, there’s a lot of stuff that they need to talk about, and I think even nothing to do with education, but even seeing their, their classmates on a screen and being able to share experiences would have gone a long way towards alleviating any source of negative mental health.”(Parent)
3.2. Children’s Mental Health
3.2.1. Social Isolation
“Because I even found my son, he’s only gone seven since June, he was six at the time. He was a really outgoing child but because with the lock down. The hassle I had to get him back out on the road just, you know when the restrictions were lifted a bit. He went really into himself- really shy, now that has all completely turned back around, he is back to his old self now. But for a few weeks, I was actually getting worried about him like his mental health at six years of age. He didn’t want to go out and he got very into himself because he wasn’t out with friends.”(Parent)
“It was the lack of social interaction with his peers. I wasn’t even worried in the beginning. I was a bit like Oh God, his maths, his whatever. But after a while I was like I don’t actually care about that. That can be picked back up well, interacting with your peers is so important you know and just weeks and months of just sitting in front of a screen.”(Parent)
“I’d say he would miss the social aspect…we have observed certain things, certain behavioural changes, not big things, but just there’s more frustration from being home all the time. I think that you just can’t. You can’t just replicate the craic a bunch of five- and six-year-olds have together and the engagement that they have…”(Parent)
3.2.2. Stress over Home- School Expectations
“There were so many projects, nearly there was one project every week and then there was like every single subject on the thing and like she’s getting us to do like so much. And then I just got like really like it was too much for me. ‘Cause I’m used to like smaller work and she would give us more time to finish it.”(Child aged 11)
“She really missed her friends and she’s at that age where she was just, she used to get quite emotional about, and anxious about getting it done and stuff like that. So there were days where I just kind of told her look. We don’t have to do anything today. You know we can just. You know, go upstairs and read a book or something, or chill out. Or watch a movie or something like that…. We will just we just put on a movie and chill out and forget about school for today.”(Parent)
3.2.3. Anxiety
“In the beginning it was a huge novelty. Of course, this is great. You can do half an hour work and watch TV and play Xbox, but as the weeks went on, I felt all of us really. The morale was very low. Our moods were very low. He was very tearful. And even the teenager who was living the dream of doing a tiny bit of work and being online all day…he was low and crying and tearful.”(Parent)
“My daughter really struggled a lot, and she was like she wasn’t really able. She wanted a lot of input, even though she didn’t really need it. So, she was very, very anxious and so basically, she’d want to be sitting here. You know, when you’re doing, the work, this is the bedroom she might be sitting on the bed and you know she’d be interrupting. Yeah, and then she’d be huffing and puffing, you know what I mean.”(Parent)
“She kept asking to watch the news, I said no, you’re not watching the news. I’ll explain to you what’s going on afterwards.”(Parent)
“she asked…if we go on a bit further because the lady and the radio says that you’re not going to go more than two kilometers? And I’m gonna go out, I’m going to be. Are we going out about 2 km zone here? We ought not be doing this, you know, yeah, so there’s no, you can’t sugarcoat if the child is able to be picking up on public health messaging.”(Parent)
3.2.4. Negative Behavioral Changes
“For a good few weeks, he didn’t see the kids (their father), so that did affect my youngest son. One of the twins, his behaviour went all over the place and he was acting up and everything and went backwards and he was starting to bed wet again and still is, so I had all like to deal with as well.”(Parent)
“You know he’s an absolute nightmare, or beating up his sister, one or the other. I was on many calls where, like my boss would say, do you want to go and sort that out because you could hear the fighting from two rooms away.”(Parent)
“Because of the lock down he didn’t see even his grandparents. Or you know anyone else for about three months, so he got really, really clingy with my wife, like his mam. And then he couldn’t like, she has to sleep in the same room with him, and if she is going to the toilet, he would follow her. I think the lock down really did play; I mean he was pretty attached but it got way worse. We had gotten used to the behaviour, and now that were coming out of the lock down, we can see already, he’s a little bit less, because he’s getting to see his grandparents once a week and he gets to go out on more trips without being confined. So, he’s coming out of it a little bit, but there were definitely behavioural issues because of the lockdown. It was it was blowing over like the you know, but through this winter again I’d say he’d regress all over again.”(Parent)
3.3. Adolescents Mental Health
“He was getting very depressed. At one stage he even asked me to get a counsellor. That’s how depressed he was getting. So, I was getting really worried about it. He seems to be coming back to himself but for a while, yeah. It had more impact on him then it did the little ones.”(Parent)
“He spends a lot of time in my mother’s house so yeah, he was pretty much locked in and he was getting very down some days. So, we were glad when they lifted a little bit that you could start going out and mixing with his friends and that a bit more. But I know that things like his graduation. He was very down about that like I think he was more down about that then missing his Leaving Cert I’ll be honest with you.”
“She was robbed of a rite of passage I suppose. And she does feel upset over that and disappointed.”(Parent)
“So she had months on her own dwelling on that. So that wasn’t a good year for her, and that’s a funny age as well, because you’re kind of like maturing and then puberty and everything. Yeah, full on hormones and she doesn’t like change. The biggest change of her life is coming, and then she just sat at home for months to think about it. Yeah, so that that was. I had to send her to a counsellor then after that ‘cause she just was struggling with anxiety for it”.(Parent)
“we stressed out so much because my parents are actually in the middle of a divorce, but they live in the same house. So that alone is stressful, then lockdown came, and my dad was always at home. Obviously, we couldn’t go anywhere we can’t get out of the house and it really added to the stress ‘cause you can’t walk into a room where my two parents are because you’re like stepping on egg-shells. It’s not really a relationship. I know for me it really effects like my mental health and everything. I hate being stuck inside. I don’t mind being inside, but you know, I just wanted my one time where I was like. I really want to go out. I really wanna get outta here. I even missed getting the bus.”(Child)
“it was a struggle to get my 14-year-old out of the bed, because, you know, they’re not tired enough, so they’re not going to sleep. First of all, it was midnight. Then it was 1 AM like the average now its 3 AM for the two older ones. And of course, they don’t get up till 11 or 12.”(Parent)
“then for the past three months she’s lay on the sofa on her phone, and there’s nothing I can do that will motivate her to do anything. You know, should I take the phone off her? Should I ban her?”(Parent)
“We were on holiday last year with family that live in the UK and their daughter sent her some pictures that had come up, like they were looking at from last year and my daughter was just like Oh my gosh like, I hate myself. I hate myself. I hate my body and it was purely body image and she’s hitting that age.”(Parent)
“So, we had to go and buy a printer so he could print out worksheets and stuff for him to do and he painted a lot of furniture. He painted the decking. He did gardening… You know anything just to keep him busy.”(Parent)
3.4. Mental Health Challenges for Children and Adolescents with Autism
“Especially my younger daughter is on the ASD spectrum and she will have to integrate again. She does it every time she’s in school and they’re off on Friday and back on Monday, it’s a big stress for her, so you can imagine how 6 months off is going to be for her. It’s going to be like the first day of school again.”(Parent)
“Like he used to freak out if my wife would leave the house at all without him, because she hadn’t left the house without him in months. He lost his routine and then the new routine again was really unhealthy in a way, because there was no, kind of external anything for him.”(Parent)
“You know it’s funny because some of the kids that I have like they would be very tuned in to, um, just you know they, they have a special subject like most kids with Autism have special interests…. But yeah, some of them are really aware of, of these viruses and how they could lead to other viruses and they were really stressed.”(Parent)
“He said that like even if there was a vaccination, he wouldn’t get it. And, because he’s afraid of needles, and he’s afraid. Basically, he started to think an awful lot about you know what will happen to him when his parents are dead and when he’s like an individual living in the world with Autism and not having the support he’s had all his life, so he’s gone really into existential anxiety and. You know this is what COVID has done. Like you know, it’s a psychological disease as well.”(Parent)
4. Discussion
4.1. Social Isolation
4.2. Stress over Home-Schooling
4.3. Behaviour Changes, Depression, and Anxiety among Young People
4.4. Young People with Autism Mental Health Negatively Impacted
4.5. Limitations
5. Conclusions
6. Interview Protocol
- Can you tell me a bit about your day-to-day family life during the COVID-19 pandemic?
- Can you tell me a little bit about what your average school day looked like before the COVID-19 pandemic?
- Did you do homework?
- Favourite subjects?
- What was fun in school?
- Do parents work—how does school life and home-life meet?
- Can you talk about how the COVID-19 has affected your schoolwork?
- Did the school talk to you about what was happening at the start?
- Did you (the child) know what was happening?
- Was your work life affected?
- Were there any emotional effects?
- Were you able to engage with school subjects and content?
- Who in the household manages the home-schooling?
- Many families have found home-schooling difficult or strange—some have done it, some have not—can you tell me if you have been able to keep up with school during the crisis? Tell me how your day-to-day school engagement looks (even if there is none it is fine).
- Is there anything that has been particularly helpful to you over the last few months in doing home-school work?
- Is there anything that has been particularly challenging?
- How have you had contact with school?
- Would you have preferred different contact?
- How about you (child) did you see your teacher in the last while?
- Have you any ideas on how we could have made this better for children?
- Do you guys use computers tablets and/or the Internet—tell me what you like to do on these?
- Do you use these for school-work? Is there any apps or sites you have used for home schooling?
- Can you describe what that has been like?
- Any challenges?
- Any good points?
- Does this feel the same as school learning?
- Have you engaged with Raidió Teilifís Éireann (RTE) school or any specific things that support school work?
- What was it like? Can you talk me through your answer a little?
- If this pandemic happened again what do you think schools could do to help you?
- Is there anything that we could do online to help with schooling in the future?
- Would you like to tell me anything important about your home school experience that you have not had a chance to say or has just occurred to you?
- Are you worried about going back to school?
- What is the biggest thing you both/all miss about going to school? What don’t you miss?
- Can you talk about how the COVID-19 has affected your family?
- Can you tell me what you think the future will look like for you and your family?
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Interviewee Classification | Female | Male |
---|---|---|
Parent | 43 | 6 |
Child | 21 | 24 |
Theme | Referral (out of 48) | Percentage |
---|---|---|
Children Have Borne the Brunt of Covid-19 | 24 | 53% |
Social Isolation | 36 | 80% |
Stress over Home-schooling | 31 | 69% |
Negative Behavioural Changes | 16 | 36% |
Difficulty being confined in the Household | 21 | 47% |
Depression/Anxiety among Young People | 13 | 29% |
Young People with Autism Mental Health Negatively Impacted | 6 | 11% |
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Share and Cite
O’Sullivan, K.; Clark, S.; McGrane, A.; Rock, N.; Burke, L.; Boyle, N.; Joksimovic, N.; Marshall, K. A Qualitative Study of Child and Adolescent Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ireland. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 1062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18031062
O’Sullivan K, Clark S, McGrane A, Rock N, Burke L, Boyle N, Joksimovic N, Marshall K. A Qualitative Study of Child and Adolescent Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ireland. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(3):1062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18031062
Chicago/Turabian StyleO’Sullivan, Katriona, Serena Clark, Amy McGrane, Nicole Rock, Lydia Burke, Neasa Boyle, Natasha Joksimovic, and Kevin Marshall. 2021. "A Qualitative Study of Child and Adolescent Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Ireland" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 3: 1062. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18031062