Experiencing quarantine restrictions for adolescents with and without suicidal experience in Russia

IntroductionThe life changes and limitations associated with Covid-19 clearly have serious psychological implications. The life of adolescents has also changed significantly in many areas: study, communication with peers, contact with family, etc. and not all adolescents have adapted to these change...

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Veröffentlicht in:European psychiatry 2021-04, Vol.64 (S1), p.S587-S588
Hauptverfasser: Dovbysh, D., Ermakova, M., Kiseleva, M.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:IntroductionThe life changes and limitations associated with Covid-19 clearly have serious psychological implications. The life of adolescents has also changed significantly in many areas: study, communication with peers, contact with family, etc. and not all adolescents have adapted to these changes equally easily.ObjectivesStudy adolescents’ perception of Covid-19, describe the effect of self-isolation on adolescent emotional well-being, and examine changes in the family system through the eyes of a teenager.MethodsThe study involved two groups of adolescents: the first (G1) - 174 students of a Moscow school and the second (G2) - 39 adolescents hospitalized in a children’s psychiatric clinic in connection with suicidal actions. Teenagers filled out the author’s questionnaire, Short Health Anxiety Inventory (Salkovskis), Analysis of Family Anxiety (Eidemiller, Yustickis), Prohibition on the expression of feelings (Kholmogorova).ResultsParticipants in G2 significantly more often than G1 reported that their functioning worsened (it became more difficult to study - 72% versus 51%; more difficult to communicate - 76% versus 41%, more conflicts with family members - 49% versus 25%). G2 demonstrated a significantly higher level of family anxiety (M = 17.3 and M = 12.1 p
ISSN:0924-9338
1778-3585
DOI:10.1192/j.eurpsy.2021.1567