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Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences

PURPOSE: The COVID-19 pandemic affects students in a myriad of different ways. Our prospective, longitudinal study in a cohort of students in Hannover, Germany explores behavioral patterns during escalating COVID-19 restrictions. METHODS: In total, 777 students between the age of 9 and 20 were asses...

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Autores principales: Paulsen, Mira, Zychlinsky Scharff, Anna, de Cassan, Kristof, Sugianto, Rizky Indrameikha, Blume, Cornelia, Blume, Holger, Christmann, Martin, Hauß, Corinna, Illig, Thomas, Jonczyk, Rebecca, Klopp, Norman, Kopfnagel, Verena, Lichtinghagen, Ralf, Lucas, Henning, Luhr, Anke, Mutschler, Frauke, Pietschmann, Thomas, Pott, Philipp-Cornelius, Prokein, Jana, Schaefer, Paula, Stahl, Frank, Stanislawski, Nils, von der Born, Jeannine, Schmidt, Bernhard M.W., Heiden, Stefanie, Stiesch, Meike, Memaran, Nima, Melk, Anette
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8610846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34972613
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.11.021
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author Paulsen, Mira
Zychlinsky Scharff, Anna
de Cassan, Kristof
Sugianto, Rizky Indrameikha
Blume, Cornelia
Blume, Holger
Christmann, Martin
Hauß, Corinna
Illig, Thomas
Jonczyk, Rebecca
Klopp, Norman
Kopfnagel, Verena
Lichtinghagen, Ralf
Lucas, Henning
Luhr, Anke
Mutschler, Frauke
Pietschmann, Thomas
Pott, Philipp-Cornelius
Prokein, Jana
Schaefer, Paula
Stahl, Frank
Stanislawski, Nils
von der Born, Jeannine
Schmidt, Bernhard M.W.
Heiden, Stefanie
Stiesch, Meike
Memaran, Nima
Melk, Anette
author_facet Paulsen, Mira
Zychlinsky Scharff, Anna
de Cassan, Kristof
Sugianto, Rizky Indrameikha
Blume, Cornelia
Blume, Holger
Christmann, Martin
Hauß, Corinna
Illig, Thomas
Jonczyk, Rebecca
Klopp, Norman
Kopfnagel, Verena
Lichtinghagen, Ralf
Lucas, Henning
Luhr, Anke
Mutschler, Frauke
Pietschmann, Thomas
Pott, Philipp-Cornelius
Prokein, Jana
Schaefer, Paula
Stahl, Frank
Stanislawski, Nils
von der Born, Jeannine
Schmidt, Bernhard M.W.
Heiden, Stefanie
Stiesch, Meike
Memaran, Nima
Melk, Anette
author_sort Paulsen, Mira
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: The COVID-19 pandemic affects students in a myriad of different ways. Our prospective, longitudinal study in a cohort of students in Hannover, Germany explores behavioral patterns during escalating COVID-19 restrictions. METHODS: In total, 777 students between the age of 9 and 20 were assessed for their activity engagement, travel patterns, and self-assessed compliance with protective recommendations at six time points between June 2020 and June 2021 (3,564 observations) and were monitored for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection by nasal swab polymerase chain reaction and serum antibody titers. RESULTS: Activity engagement decreased, but self-assessed compliance with measures such as mask wearing and social distancing was stable during escalating restrictions. Although we found no sex difference during the summer break, when incidence was lowest, females engaged in a higher variety of activities than males for all other time points. Older students engaged in more activities and self-assigned themselves lower compliance values than younger ones. Greater involvement in different activities was seen in households which traveled more frequently. Infection rate in our cohort was low (0.03% acute infections, 1.94% positive seroprevalence). DISCUSSION: Our study supports the view that, overall, students show high compliance with COVID-19 recommendations and restrictions. The identification of subsets, such as female and older students, with higher risk behavioral patterns should be considered when implementing public information campaigns. In light of the low infection rate in our cohort, we conclude that in-person learning can occur safely if extensive protective measures are in place and the incidence in the general population remains moderate.
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spelling pubmed-86108462021-11-24 Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences Paulsen, Mira Zychlinsky Scharff, Anna de Cassan, Kristof Sugianto, Rizky Indrameikha Blume, Cornelia Blume, Holger Christmann, Martin Hauß, Corinna Illig, Thomas Jonczyk, Rebecca Klopp, Norman Kopfnagel, Verena Lichtinghagen, Ralf Lucas, Henning Luhr, Anke Mutschler, Frauke Pietschmann, Thomas Pott, Philipp-Cornelius Prokein, Jana Schaefer, Paula Stahl, Frank Stanislawski, Nils von der Born, Jeannine Schmidt, Bernhard M.W. Heiden, Stefanie Stiesch, Meike Memaran, Nima Melk, Anette J Adolesc Health Original Article PURPOSE: The COVID-19 pandemic affects students in a myriad of different ways. Our prospective, longitudinal study in a cohort of students in Hannover, Germany explores behavioral patterns during escalating COVID-19 restrictions. METHODS: In total, 777 students between the age of 9 and 20 were assessed for their activity engagement, travel patterns, and self-assessed compliance with protective recommendations at six time points between June 2020 and June 2021 (3,564 observations) and were monitored for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 infection by nasal swab polymerase chain reaction and serum antibody titers. RESULTS: Activity engagement decreased, but self-assessed compliance with measures such as mask wearing and social distancing was stable during escalating restrictions. Although we found no sex difference during the summer break, when incidence was lowest, females engaged in a higher variety of activities than males for all other time points. Older students engaged in more activities and self-assigned themselves lower compliance values than younger ones. Greater involvement in different activities was seen in households which traveled more frequently. Infection rate in our cohort was low (0.03% acute infections, 1.94% positive seroprevalence). DISCUSSION: Our study supports the view that, overall, students show high compliance with COVID-19 recommendations and restrictions. The identification of subsets, such as female and older students, with higher risk behavioral patterns should be considered when implementing public information campaigns. In light of the low infection rate in our cohort, we conclude that in-person learning can occur safely if extensive protective measures are in place and the incidence in the general population remains moderate. Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. 2022-03 2021-11-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8610846/ /pubmed/34972613 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.11.021 Text en © 2021 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. All rights reserved. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Original Article
Paulsen, Mira
Zychlinsky Scharff, Anna
de Cassan, Kristof
Sugianto, Rizky Indrameikha
Blume, Cornelia
Blume, Holger
Christmann, Martin
Hauß, Corinna
Illig, Thomas
Jonczyk, Rebecca
Klopp, Norman
Kopfnagel, Verena
Lichtinghagen, Ralf
Lucas, Henning
Luhr, Anke
Mutschler, Frauke
Pietschmann, Thomas
Pott, Philipp-Cornelius
Prokein, Jana
Schaefer, Paula
Stahl, Frank
Stanislawski, Nils
von der Born, Jeannine
Schmidt, Bernhard M.W.
Heiden, Stefanie
Stiesch, Meike
Memaran, Nima
Melk, Anette
Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences
title Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences
title_full Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences
title_fullStr Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences
title_full_unstemmed Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences
title_short Children and Adolescents’ Behavioral Patterns in Response to Escalating COVID-19 Restriction Reveal Sex and Age Differences
title_sort children and adolescents’ behavioral patterns in response to escalating covid-19 restriction reveal sex and age differences
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8610846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34972613
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jadohealth.2021.11.021
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