Anxiety and depressive symptoms of young children during the COVID-19 pandemic: Developmental trajectories and risk factors

Publication date

2025

Authors

Krijnen, LisaISNI 0000000506789740
van Baar, A.L.ORCID 0000-0002-3498-9019ISNI 0000000033077048
Egberts, Marthe RianneISNI 0000000492496858
Mooren, TrudyISNI 0000000041859824
van Eldik, Willemijn MISNI 0000000507773636
De Young, Alexandra C
van Rooijen, Bregje
Spuij, M.ISNI 0000000389269120
Boelen, PaulISNI 000000004342164X
Verhoeven, MarjoleinISNI 0000000391364821

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

The course of young children’s anxiety and depressive symptoms during the COVID-19 crisis varied. To understand this variability, this longitudinal study examined trajectories of anxiety and depressive symptoms and associated risk factors. Parents of 503 children aged 1–6 years (48% girls, 99% Dutch) completed a survey in four waves, covering a period of 1.5 years during the COVID-19 pandemic. Parents answered questionnaires regarding children’s anxiety and depressive symptoms and risk factors: direct COVID-19 factors (infection, death), family-related COVID-19 factors (parental perceived impact of the pandemic and parent–child emotion regulation strategies), and general caregiver’s distress (parental mental health, parental feelings of rejection toward the child). Using latent class growth analyses, anxiety and depressive symptom trajectories were identified. Regression analyses were conducted to identify risk factors. For anxiety, two trajectories were identified: low (87.67%) and high (12.33%). For depressive symptoms, three trajectories were identified: low (78.93%), high-decreasing (13.72%), and strong increasing (7.36%). Risk factors for falling within the high anxiety symptoms, or high-decreasing or strong increasing depressive symptoms trajectory, were death of a loved one, parental perceived negative impact of the pandemic, avoidant- and information-focused parent–child emotion regulation strategies, parental mental health problems, and parental feelings of rejection toward the child. Most children were reported to have low levels of anxiety and depressive symptoms during the COVID-19 crisis, but some children experienced higher symptoms and may benefit from follow-up and support. If a future crisis occurs, it is advised to screen and intervene on a family level to protect young children’s mental health.

Keywords

COVID-19, anxiety, depression, pandemic, young children, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Krijnen, L J G, van Baar, A L, Egberts, M R, Mooren, T T M, van Eldik, W M, De Young, A C, van Rooijen, B, Spuij, M, Boelen, P A & Verhoeven, M 2025, 'Anxiety and depressive symptoms of young children during the COVID-19 pandemic : Developmental trajectories and risk factors', Developmental Psychology, vol. 61, no. 11, pp. 2160-2171. https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0002021