Cargando…

Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation

AIM: To assess the effect of parental and peer support on children's self‐esteem during the isolation period in COVID‐19‐infected children is the main objective of this study. DESIGN: This is a descriptive cross‐sectional study. One hundred ninety children with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‐19...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Alrashidi, Nojoud, Ahmed, Faransa A., Abdelmonem, Huwida H., Almowafy, Abeer A., Abed El‐fatah, Ola A., Elalem, Omaim M., Behilak, Sahar G., Syan, Shadia A., Sayed, Mervat A., Mohammed, Hanan A., Hussien, Mona F., Ibrahim, Mervat E., AlAbd, Asmaa M., Mohamed, Rasha A., Marzouk, Salwa A., Abdel Wahed, Wafaa Y., Atwa, Zeze T., Mohamed, Sayeda M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10563423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37632315
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1972
_version_ 1785118336851378176
author Alrashidi, Nojoud
Ahmed, Faransa A.
Abdelmonem, Huwida H.
Almowafy, Abeer A.
Abed El‐fatah, Ola A.
Elalem, Omaim M.
Behilak, Sahar G.
Syan, Shadia A.
Sayed, Mervat A.
Mohammed, Hanan A.
Hussien, Mona F.
Ibrahim, Mervat E.
AlAbd, Asmaa M.
Mohamed, Rasha A.
Marzouk, Salwa A.
Abdel Wahed, Wafaa Y.
Atwa, Zeze T.
Mohamed, Sayeda M.
author_facet Alrashidi, Nojoud
Ahmed, Faransa A.
Abdelmonem, Huwida H.
Almowafy, Abeer A.
Abed El‐fatah, Ola A.
Elalem, Omaim M.
Behilak, Sahar G.
Syan, Shadia A.
Sayed, Mervat A.
Mohammed, Hanan A.
Hussien, Mona F.
Ibrahim, Mervat E.
AlAbd, Asmaa M.
Mohamed, Rasha A.
Marzouk, Salwa A.
Abdel Wahed, Wafaa Y.
Atwa, Zeze T.
Mohamed, Sayeda M.
author_sort Alrashidi, Nojoud
collection PubMed
description AIM: To assess the effect of parental and peer support on children's self‐esteem during the isolation period in COVID‐19‐infected children is the main objective of this study. DESIGN: This is a descriptive cross‐sectional study. One hundred ninety children with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‐19 were included. METHODS: A survey questionnaire to assess family and children's demographic characteristics was used for this study. A 13‐item scale to assess parental support during the isolation period and a 10‐item scale to assess peers' support during the isolation period were evaluated. Along with it, a 10‐item scale to assess self‐esteem during the isolation period was also measured. RESULTS: Home isolation was associated with higher parental and peer support scores than hospital isolation. The mean age of study participants was 13.23 ± 4.05 years; 52.6% were isolated at home versus 47.4% in hospital isolation. Phone calling and WhatsApp/messenger chat were methods of communication for 44.2% and 33.2% of patients, respectively. 6.3% of them had no method of communication. Child self‐esteem was significantly affected by both parental and peer support during isolation. The increase in pronounced negative psychological effects such as disorientation, anger, low self‐esteem and post‐traumatic distress may be caused by a lack of parental care. NO PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION TO THIS STUDY: Patients or the general public were not involved in the design, analysis or interpretation of the data in this study. The study's aim and objectives were developed based on children's self‐esteem, which was limited by questionnaire data information, so the researchers completed demographic and disease‐related questionnaires by interviewing them.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10563423
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher John Wiley and Sons Inc.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-105634232023-10-11 Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation Alrashidi, Nojoud Ahmed, Faransa A. Abdelmonem, Huwida H. Almowafy, Abeer A. Abed El‐fatah, Ola A. Elalem, Omaim M. Behilak, Sahar G. Syan, Shadia A. Sayed, Mervat A. Mohammed, Hanan A. Hussien, Mona F. Ibrahim, Mervat E. AlAbd, Asmaa M. Mohamed, Rasha A. Marzouk, Salwa A. Abdel Wahed, Wafaa Y. Atwa, Zeze T. Mohamed, Sayeda M. Nurs Open Review Article AIM: To assess the effect of parental and peer support on children's self‐esteem during the isolation period in COVID‐19‐infected children is the main objective of this study. DESIGN: This is a descriptive cross‐sectional study. One hundred ninety children with a confirmed diagnosis of COVID‐19 were included. METHODS: A survey questionnaire to assess family and children's demographic characteristics was used for this study. A 13‐item scale to assess parental support during the isolation period and a 10‐item scale to assess peers' support during the isolation period were evaluated. Along with it, a 10‐item scale to assess self‐esteem during the isolation period was also measured. RESULTS: Home isolation was associated with higher parental and peer support scores than hospital isolation. The mean age of study participants was 13.23 ± 4.05 years; 52.6% were isolated at home versus 47.4% in hospital isolation. Phone calling and WhatsApp/messenger chat were methods of communication for 44.2% and 33.2% of patients, respectively. 6.3% of them had no method of communication. Child self‐esteem was significantly affected by both parental and peer support during isolation. The increase in pronounced negative psychological effects such as disorientation, anger, low self‐esteem and post‐traumatic distress may be caused by a lack of parental care. NO PATIENT OR PUBLIC CONTRIBUTION TO THIS STUDY: Patients or the general public were not involved in the design, analysis or interpretation of the data in this study. The study's aim and objectives were developed based on children's self‐esteem, which was limited by questionnaire data information, so the researchers completed demographic and disease‐related questionnaires by interviewing them. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2023-08-26 /pmc/articles/PMC10563423/ /pubmed/37632315 http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1972 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Nursing Open published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/) License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made.
spellingShingle Review Article
Alrashidi, Nojoud
Ahmed, Faransa A.
Abdelmonem, Huwida H.
Almowafy, Abeer A.
Abed El‐fatah, Ola A.
Elalem, Omaim M.
Behilak, Sahar G.
Syan, Shadia A.
Sayed, Mervat A.
Mohammed, Hanan A.
Hussien, Mona F.
Ibrahim, Mervat E.
AlAbd, Asmaa M.
Mohamed, Rasha A.
Marzouk, Salwa A.
Abdel Wahed, Wafaa Y.
Atwa, Zeze T.
Mohamed, Sayeda M.
Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
title Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
title_full Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
title_fullStr Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
title_full_unstemmed Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
title_short Children patients with COVID‐19: How can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
title_sort children patients with covid‐19: how can parental and peer support lessen the psychological burden of isolation
topic Review Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10563423/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37632315
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/nop2.1972
work_keys_str_mv AT alrashidinojoud childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT ahmedfaransaa childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT abdelmonemhuwidah childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT almowafyabeera childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT abedelfataholaa childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT elalemomaimm childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT behilaksaharg childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT syanshadiaa childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT sayedmervata childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT mohammedhanana childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT hussienmonaf childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT ibrahimmervate childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT alabdasmaam childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT mohamedrashaa childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT marzouksalwaa childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT abdelwahedwafaay childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT atwazezet childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation
AT mohamedsayedam childrenpatientswithcovid19howcanparentalandpeersupportlessenthepsychologicalburdenofisolation