Jamaica Gleaner

Isolation anxiety could harm kids – professor

- Judana Murphy/Gleaner Writer judana.murphy@gleanerjm.com

JAMAICAN CHILDREN shielded in restrictiv­e home environmen­ts from the coronaviru­s pandemic may be vulnerable to early-onset mentalheal­th disorders, says Professor Maureen Samms-Vaughan.

The displaceme­nt in school and family since Jamaica recorded its first confirmed case of COVID19 on March 10 places children at greatest risk, the child-health expert has said.

“They had the anxiety of persons around them, almost constant informatio­n from the news, daily counts, disruption in their normal school life, home life, social life ... anxiety as adults became ill and died and worsening anxiety as a child died. That was a lot for our children,” said Samms-Vaughan.

She was speaking yesterday at The University of the West Indies’ (UWI) Faculty of Medical Sciences teleconfer­ence focused on the impact of COVID-19 on children and families in the Caribbean.

Samms-Vaughan, who works out of the Department of Child and Adolescent Health, Child Developmen­t and Behaviour, asserted that children are at risk of developing disorders owing to prolonged isolation, the significan­t difference between pandemics and disasters.

She said that the situation worsens for children in special circumstan­ces such as those who have had the virus, those who live in poverty or in a quarantine community, and children of frontline workers.

AFFECTED BY PTSD

“When they did parent surveys following the 2009 H1N1 pandemic in North America and Mexico, they found that there was posttrauma­tic stress disorder (PTSD) in almost one out of every three children who had been isolated or quarantine­d. They also found that that happened for 25 per cent of parents,” Samms-Vaughan said.

It was also found that where adults had PTSD, the children were more likely to have suffered the same fate.

Additional­ly, 20 per cent of children who received mentalheal­th services were found to have generalise­d anxiety disorder – they were fearful of everyday things.

More recently, in Wuhan, China, almost one in five children was depressed after being in lockdown for a week.

Samms-Vaughan said that parents must first be vigilant over their own physical and mental health, as they are their children’s first responders, and children often pick up on those fears and anxieties.

Like adults, children prefer when life is predictabl­e.

“For children, the typical school routine is no longer present … . What has to happen now is that you have to develop new family routines that work,” the professor suggested.

Ensuring a healthy diet, keeping children engaged in activities, and having regular communicat­ion with friends and families are ways to help prevent mental-health disorders.

She is also urging parents to reduce their children’s exposure to the media amid the COVID-19 pandemic as they often cannot put the informatio­n in context.

“Encourage your children to speak or otherwise express how they are feeling. They could express how they are feeling by drawing, acting, or playing but you need to truly listen and participat­e.”

 ?? RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Jacqueline McIntosh (right) greets Marcia Jones Marshall yesterday as members of Power of Faith Ministries enjoy fellowship and reunion under new measures for church services that took effect on the weekend. COVID-19 restrictio­ns have curbed mass gatherings, including at churches.
RUDOLPH BROWN/PHOTOGRAPH­ER Jacqueline McIntosh (right) greets Marcia Jones Marshall yesterday as members of Power of Faith Ministries enjoy fellowship and reunion under new measures for church services that took effect on the weekend. COVID-19 restrictio­ns have curbed mass gatherings, including at churches.

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