How the mental health of working parents in Australia changed during COVID-19: A pre- to during pandemic longitudinal comparison

Liana Leach*, Peter Butterworth, Stacey Hokke, Jasmine Love, Shannon K. Bennetts, Sharinne Crawford, Amanda Cooklin

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Cross-sectional studies indicate that mental health has deteriorated in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic, including for parents. However, robust longitudinal studies interrogating change from before to during the pandemic remain rare. The current study analysed data from Australian parents surveyed in 2016 and August 2020. We investigate whether distress was higher in the COVID-19 period compared to pre-pandemic levels, and whether any increases in distress were greatest for parents living in Victoria (who had entered their second prolonged lockdown). Methods: A community cohort of Australian working parents (n = 5197) was recruited online in 2016. In August 2020, 25.9 % (n = 1348) completed a follow-up survey. Analyses were restricted to those employed at both time-points (n = 1311). Random effects longitudinal models examined the association between time (i.e. pre vs. during-pandemic) and distress (K6 scale). Fixed effects models specifically tested change between time periods in association with change in distress. Limitations: The initial sample were recruited online with highly educate parents over-represented. Attrition between survey time-points may also limit generalisability. Results: All models consistently showed that the pandemic period was associated with greater distress. Overall, serious mental illness (i.e. K6 score ≥ 18) increased by 5.3 percentage points (from 8.0 to 13.3). This increase was greater (by 4.7 percentage points) for those parents in Victoria. Conclusions: This study is one of few to longitudinally assess mental health pre- to during the pandemic. Psychological distress and serious mental illness increased for Australian working parents, and this effect was greatest for those experiencing a prolonged lockdown in Victoria.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)564-571
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Affective Disorders
Volume325
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 7 Jan 2023

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