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Lockdown made life worse for two in five children, NHS report says - BBC News

Lockdown made life worse for two in five children, NHS report says

By Philippa Roxby
Health reporter

Published
Related Topics
  • Coronavirus pandemic
Teenage girl looking at her phone in her bed
image copyrightGetty Images

Two in five children aged 11 to 16 feel the coronavirus lockdown has made their lives worse, an NHS England report on mental health suggests.

They said their biggest anxieties were about missing school and and family and friends contracting Covid-19.

Mental disorders have risen in boys and girls since 2017 and now affect 16% of children, a large survey suggests.

Alleviating anxiety levels in children must be addressed, experts say.

NHS England's report is based on a survey of 3,570 children and young people up to the age of 22 who were interviewed in 2017 and followed up online in July during the coronavirus pandemic.

Complex reasons

During this time, rates of mental disorders affecting children's emotions, behaviour and relationships are thought to have risen - from one in six to one in nine.

In boys, they rose from 11% to 16% and in girls from 10% to 15%, the report found.

Prof Tamsin Ford, report author and professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Cambridge, said the pandemic was likely to have contributed to the increase, although the reasons are complex.

"For teachers with 30 children in a class, they have gone from having three children in their class with difficulties to five, and these are problems which are likely to impact children's development," she said.

Previous surveys suggest many children have struggled with the impact of lockdown and ongoing restrictions, but others appear to have coped better and were less anxious when schools were closed.

This survey found 42% of 11- to 16-year-olds and 43% of 17- to 22-year-olds felt lockdown had made their lives worse, with about a third saying they felt they had stayed the same.

Sleeping problems

Children and young people with a probable mental health disorder were more likely to experience anxieties about the pandemic. These ranged from being afraid to leave the house to worries over transmitting the infection and missing schoolwork.

A quarter of those aged five to 22 said they had experienced problems sleeping in the past week. This was more common among girls than boys.

Among 11- to 22-year-old girls with a probable mental health disorder, a third said they often or always felt lonely - compared with 18% of boys in this category.

The report also found that children from white ethnic backgrounds were more likely than those from black and ethnic minority backgrounds to be affected by probable mental health disorders.

And the percentage affected increased from 13% to 18.8% between 2017 and 2020.

Among ethnic groups over the same period, the rise was from 3.8% to 7.5%.

Prof Ford said previous studies had found a similar effect on white children but the reasons weren't clear.

She said the extended family ties in ethnic minority households that spread the virus more quickly and increased their risk of Covid-19 could also "be supportive for mental health".

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2020-10-22 12:36:00Z
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