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AUTHOR(S) Rocío Díaz; Mariana Contreras; Isabel Yáñez (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Nwakerendu Waboso; Laurel Donison; Rebecca Raby (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Theresa Casey; John H. McKendrick
AUTHOR(S) Christina O’Keeffe; Sinead McNally
AUTHOR(S) Cassie J. Brownell
AUTHOR(S) Sue Rogers
AUTHOR(S) A. Qvortrup; R. Lomholt; V. Christensen (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Ellen Haug; Silje Mæland; Stine Lehmann (et al.)
This paper aimed to examine the stability and change in internet and offline gaming and the association with physical inactivity among adolescents in Norway during the pandemic. A total of 2940 youth (58% girls) aged 12–19 years participated in an online longitudinal two-wave survey during the first Norwegian national lockdown in April 2020 (t1) and in December 2020 (t2). Gaming behavior and physical activity status were assessed at both time points. Age, gender, and socioeconomic status were included as covariates.
AUTHOR(S) Tanja Poulain; Christof Meigen; Wieland Kiess (et al.)
School closures are an effective measure against the spread of Covid-19. However, they pose a major challenge to children, especially to those from socially disadvantaged families. The present study compared the wellbeing, coping with homeschooling, and leisure behavior of children and adolescents at two different periods of school closures in Germany. Wellbeing was also compared with wellbeing before the pandemic. Within the framework of the cohort study LIFE Child, 152 9- to 16-year-old children completed online surveys on wellbeing (KIDSCREEN-27 scales on physical wellbeing, psychological wellbeing, and peer and social support), coping with homeschooling (concentration, motivation, fun, mastering of schoolwork, fear of bad marks), and leisure behavior (TV time, computer gaming time, indoor physical activity) during two COVID-19-related lockdowns in March 2020 (t1) and in January 2021 (t2). Data from both time points were compared using mixed-effect models. Wellbeing was additionally compared with the wellbeing in 2019, before COVID-19 (t0). We also assessed the effects of the socio-economic status (SES) on all outcomes and changes between time points.
AUTHOR(S) Anders Nilsson; Ingvar Rosendahl; Nitya Jayaram-Lindström
AUTHOR(S) Henry B. Ellis; Sophia M. Ulman; K. John Wagner (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Ka Kei Sum; Shirong Cai; Evelyn Law (et al.)
Despite the potential for COVID-19 infection control–related events to have an effect on child well-being, comprehensive assessments of postlockdown changes and persistent outcomes are lacking. This paper aims to survey the extent of COVID-19 lockdown–related lifestyle changes, their differences by child age and family socioeconomic status, and the potential association with child adiposity 1 year after lockdown. A self-administered, electronic survey was introduced to 2 ongoing child cohorts (the Singapore Preconception Study of Long-term Maternal and Child Outcomes [S-PRESTO] cohort of preschool children aged 1-4.5 years and the Growing Up in Singapore Towards Healthy Outcomes [GUSTO] cohort of primary school children aged 9-10.7 years) from July 8, 2020, to September 5, 2020, which was 1 to 3 months after the end of strict universal movement restrictions (duration of 73 days ending on June 19, 2020). All active participants from S-PRESTO and GUSTO, 2 population-based, longitudinal, parent-offspring cohorts in Singapore, were invited to participate and monitored through June 15, 2021.
AUTHOR(S) Fernando Donizete Alves; Aline Sommerhalder; Concetta La Rocca (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Qianying Wu; Tianzhen Chen; Na Zhong (et al.)
UNICEF Innocenti's Children and COVID-19 Library is a database collecting research from around the world on COVID-19 and its impacts on children and adolescents.
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