Summary information

Study title

Dataset belonging to Emerging adults’ mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic: A prospective longitudinal study on the importance of social support

Creator

Y.H.M. van den Berg (Radboud University)
W.J. Burk (Radboud University)
A.H.N. Cillessen (Radboud University)

Study number / PID

doi:10.17026/dans-xna-hshr (DOI)

689899

easy-dataset:216595 (DANS-KNAW)

Data access

Information not available

Series

Not available

Abstract

The aim of this longitudinal study was to investigate emerging adults’ mental health before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, and whether social support from mothers, fathers, and best friends moderated the change in mental health. Participants were 98 emerging adults (46% men) who were assessed prior to COVID-19 (Mage = 20.60 years) and during the first lockdown (Mage = 22.67 years). Results indicated that the pandemic did not uniformly lead to elevated levels of mental health problems, but instead depended on level of mental health problems prior to COVID-19 and the source of support. For emerging adults who already experienced more problems prior to COVID-19, more maternal support was related to decreases in general psychological distress and depressive symptoms, whereas more paternal support was related to increases in general psychological distress and depressive symptoms. Support from best friends were not associated with (changes in) mental health.

All information about the content of the files is described in 'read me_van den Berg et al_2021.pdf'. This file also contains information about the recruitment, participants and data collection. Data and the syntax for the analyses as presented in the paper are also stored.

Topics

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Methodology

Data collection period

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Country

Time dimension

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Analysis unit

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Universe

Not available

Sampling procedure

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Kind of data

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Data collection mode

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Access

Publisher

DANS Data Station Social Sciences and Humanities

Publication year

2021

Terms of data access

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Related publications

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