The pandemic brought together a confluence of unnatural events in the lives of children: Being cooped up indoors with no physical activity, an absence of peer interaction, and online learning to name a few. This coupled with familial stress and the general morbidity set in motion a silent mental health disaster. While the long-term effects on the mental health of children continue to be studied, a few glaring trends have come to light. What is emerging is that the pandemic has affected children differently across age groups.
REGRESSION IN YOUNG CHILDREN
Predictability and consistency in care is very critical for children who are less than six years of age. This helps them develop a sense of trust and safety and eventually allows them to function independently and have healthy boundaries. The pandemic created a fair share of overwhelmed and unavailable parents. Even though they were home, they were preoccupied with competing priorities like work, household chores, illness, and uncertainty. This inhibited their ability to be truly available for their children. ‘Care’ suddenly became less predictable. To compensate, children looked to attract parental attention. And in many cases the manifestation came in the form of regression. Children regressed on old habits and milestones they had achieved earlier. For example, bed wetting at night, losing toilet training habits, not eating by themselves or not changing their clothes without help or difficulty separating from their parents as they transitioned to sch
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Quick Edit: The market's green role
The world needs to bend its rising curve of carbon emissions, a goal that's proving elusive. Adding to the challenge, US climate policy is likely to flip back into neglect mode next year.
Growth shouldn't suffer for want of a market fix
Packaged food companies should drive a food-processing revolution and run a campaign for substitution of fresh-veggie demand. It'll crush price volatility and open up space for rate cuts
We should reform import tariffs to boost Make in India!
Tariff reforms to resolve duty inversions can arrest the 'cost competitiveness leak' of Indian manufacturing
Trying to quantify everything may worsen human decisions
'Quantification fixation' is real—and we should learn to resist it
Hope has sprung anew amid the thick haze hovering over COP-29
The climate summit has seen rules being ratified for a carbon market, progress on finance and high corporate participation
Trump's return is set to send the world scouting for fresh options
His confrontational stand on issues will ruffle feathers and make nations review their alignments
Why national pride has not helped clean up Delhi's air
A sense of shame was expected to get it done. That hasn't worked. Do we lack the will and talent?
SEBI CAN DO MORE TO DISSUADE RETAIL F&O SPECULATION
A recent Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi) report highlighted the significant losses individual traders have incurred in the equity futures and options (F&O) segment between FY22 and FY24.
Is filing ITR in old regime still valid?
I am with the Indian Army. Until last year, we received Form 16 under the old tax regime, including allowances such as HRA, travel and uniform.
Avoid common mistakes in NRO, NRE accounts: A guide for NRIs
Tips on using NRE and NRO accounts to effectively manage funds, repatriate money and remain tax-compliant