Does Perceived Social Cohesion Moderate the Effect of Parental Stressors on Depressive Symptoms? A Longitudinal, Multi-Level Analysis Before and During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science

Anita Alaze, Ellen Heidinger, Oliver Razum, Odile Sauzet

In: Journal of Mental Health (2025), im Ersch. [online first: 2025-02-06]

Abstract

Background Perceived social cohesion (PSC) is a protective factor for mental health. Yet, evidence on social mechanisms influencing mental health is scarce. Aims We examined the moderating role of PSC between parental stressors and depressive symptoms before and during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods We performed a multilevel moderated linear regression analysis using German Socio-Economic Panel (G-SOEP) data to investigate the interaction of PSC in 2018 and in 2020 with parental stressors (having pre-school-aged child(-ren), concerns about COVID-19 infection, financial insecurity, working from home, changes at work) and depressive symptoms (PHQ-4) in 2020 and 2021. Results 3,112 observations from 1,621 participants were included in the regression analyses. The parental stressors had mostly negative, although not always significant effects on PHQ-4. Both PSC measures positively moderated the association between experienced financial insecurity and PHQ-4. PCS 2020 positively moderated the association between the stressors “not working from home” and “being unemployed in 2020 or 2021” compared to “having no changes at work” for those employed. It negatively moderated the association between “having some concerns about infection” and PHQ-4. Conclusions PSC can act as a buffer for parental mental health. Social cohesion should be promoted in public health interventions, especially during pandemics or disasters.

Topics: Health, Family



Keywords: Social cohesion, moderation, parental stressors, COVID-19 pandemic, mental health, depressive symptoms
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1080/09638237.2025.2460121

keyboard_arrow_up