Berliner Boersenzeitung - 'Generational problem': Youth still struggling in pandemic's shadow

EUR -
AED 4.100273
AFN 78.704698
ALL 98.180398
AMD 431.266615
ANG 1.997847
AOA 1023.661719
ARS 1274.636501
AUD 1.740169
AWG 2.012159
AZN 1.902168
BAM 1.948531
BBD 2.252895
BDT 135.574229
BGN 1.957806
BHD 0.420736
BIF 3276.385977
BMD 1.116315
BND 1.448895
BOB 7.710236
BRL 6.321141
BSD 1.115837
BTN 95.392132
BWP 15.08871
BYN 3.651577
BYR 21879.783696
BZD 2.241339
CAD 1.559661
CDF 3204.942189
CHF 0.93511
CLF 0.027488
CLP 1054.851605
CNY 8.048081
CNH 8.048713
COP 4672.617582
CRC 565.191507
CUC 1.116315
CUP 29.582361
CVE 111.077739
CZK 24.899757
DJF 198.392029
DKK 7.461011
DOP 65.755318
DZD 148.931044
EGP 55.928271
ERN 16.744732
ETB 147.916127
FJD 2.538334
FKP 0.83994
GBP 0.840472
GEL 3.05914
GGP 0.83994
GHS 13.786932
GIP 0.83994
GMD 80.937172
GNF 9661.711003
GTQ 8.56704
GYD 233.449099
HKD 8.722499
HNL 29.024598
HRK 7.537032
HTG 146.005315
HUF 402.867531
IDR 18412.786848
ILS 3.96752
IMP 0.83994
INR 95.537909
IQD 1462.373298
IRR 47010.84053
ISK 145.891703
JEP 0.83994
JMD 177.876418
JOD 0.791807
JPY 162.594147
KES 144.284207
KGS 97.622219
KHR 4487.58868
KMF 492.857526
KPW 1004.7411
KRW 1561.859763
KWD 0.343271
KYD 0.929931
KZT 568.917607
LAK 24134.741384
LBP 99966.052938
LKR 333.874454
LRD 222.872814
LSL 20.18341
LTL 3.29619
LVL 0.675249
LYD 6.156524
MAD 10.390111
MDL 19.437487
MGA 5063.607471
MKD 61.59455
MMK 2343.6765
MNT 3999.013199
MOP 8.981892
MRU 44.262332
MUR 51.47373
MVR 17.25866
MWK 1936.807768
MXN 21.73009
MYR 4.795735
MZN 71.336723
NAD 20.183405
NGN 1788.71739
NIO 41.025015
NOK 11.593835
NPR 152.62761
NZD 1.897963
OMR 0.429751
PAB 1.115837
PEN 4.113853
PGK 4.540893
PHP 62.294316
PKR 314.212804
PLN 4.26907
PYG 8908.765131
QAR 4.066928
RON 5.106255
RSD 116.794289
RUB 90.368307
RWF 1583.493529
SAR 4.187046
SBD 9.31055
SCR 16.186763
SDG 670.351558
SEK 10.907859
SGD 1.451996
SHP 0.877249
SLE 25.344455
SLL 23408.578004
SOS 637.978393
SRD 40.8365
STD 23105.476908
SVC 9.763576
SYP 14514.261285
SZL 20.183396
THB 37.229534
TJS 11.503983
TMT 3.912686
TND 3.370607
TOP 2.614527
TRY 43.377235
TTD 7.568764
TWD 33.732603
TZS 3011.2651
UAH 46.317202
UGX 4082.7689
USD 1.116315
UYU 46.426594
UZS 14442.335753
VES 105.163869
VND 28936.572095
VUV 133.952878
WST 3.099125
XAF 653.518994
XAG 0.034581
XAU 0.000349
XCD 3.016899
XDR 0.820087
XOF 642.443581
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.496621
ZAR 20.143411
ZMK 10048.183034
ZMW 29.993108
ZWL 359.453134
  • RBGPF

    1.5000

    64.5

    +2.33%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    22.05

    -0.23%

  • CMSD

    0.0472

    22.06

    +0.21%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.5

    0%

  • RELX

    0.5300

    54.57

    +0.97%

  • RIO

    -0.1100

    62.64

    -0.18%

  • BTI

    1.2700

    42.64

    +2.98%

  • GSK

    0.4991

    37.64

    +1.33%

  • BCC

    0.9200

    91.91

    +1%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.76

    +0.44%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.9

    +1.24%

  • NGG

    1.2500

    71.28

    +1.75%

  • AZN

    0.8500

    68.81

    +1.24%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0900

    10.7

    -0.84%

  • VOD

    0.1800

    9.45

    +1.9%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    21.56

    -0.32%

'Generational problem': Youth still struggling in pandemic's shadow
'Generational problem': Youth still struggling in pandemic's shadow / Photo: Sameer Al-DOUMY - AFP/File

'Generational problem': Youth still struggling in pandemic's shadow

Like many other young people, Amelie feels that the Covid-19 pandemic -- and its procession of lockdowns and restrictions -- marked a "turning point" for her mental health.

Text size:

"I came face to face with everything I had been repressing -- and it triggered an enormous depression," the French university student, who was 19 years old when the pandemic broke out in 2020, told AFP.

Five years later, Amelie is still receiving treatment for her mental health. She did not want to give her last name for fear it could impact future job opportunities.

But she is far from alone in still struggling with the lasting psychological consequences from the Covid era.

Research has shown that younger people, who were forced into isolation during one of the most social times of their lives, took the biggest mental health hit during the pandemic.

In France, a fifth of 18-24 year olds experienced an episode of depression in 2021, according to a survey by the country's public health agency.

In the United States, 37 percent of high school students reported experiencing poor mental health in the same year, according the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

And a recent study of more than 700,000 Finnish teens published in The Lancet Psychiatry journal had similar findings.

"The proportion of participants with generalised anxiety, depression, and social anxiety symptoms...increased from pre-Covid-19 pandemic levels to 2021 and remained at these higher levels in 2023," it said.

- 'Long tail of challenges' -

The fallout from the pandemic is also being felt by the next generation.

Some children who were just starting school five years ago have experienced problems with learning and emotional development.

A 2023 review of around 40 studies across 15 countries published in the journal Nature Human Behaviour found that children had still not caught up from the significant delays in their learning.

"It's a real generational problem," said the study's lead author Bastian Betthauser.

These problems also appear to last well beyond the Covid years.

The UK saw an unprecedented level of school absences in the 2023/2024 academic year, according to the country's education agency Ofsted, which lamented that a post-pandemic "shift in attitudes" meant attendance is now "viewed more casually".

Simon Kidwell, the principal of Hartford Manor primary school in northwest England's Cheshire county, said the pandemic had created a "long tail of challenges".

"Academically, we caught up quite quickly," he told AFP.

However, "we've seen a huge spike in children needing to access mental health services," he added.

There has also been a "huge increase" in the number of children with special educational needs or requiring extra support for behavioural challenges, Kidwell said.

Once they start school, younger children were also having more problems with speech and language, he added.

Some young students with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or autism spectrum disorder (ASD) may have had a different reaction to the time off school.

Selina Warlow, a psychologist who works with children affected by these disorders at a clinic in Farnham near London, said "a lot of autistic children loved being in lockdown".

"The school environment is really overwhelming. It's loud. It's busy. Being in a class of 30 other children is really difficult for them," she told AFP.

Now, some might ask "why put me back in that?" she said, while emphasising that other students with these disorders found it difficult losing the structure and routine of school.

The pandemic also meant that a lot of young children did not "get the early support they needed," she added.

"Intervening in those very early years can have a huge amount of impact on the child."

(B.Hartmann--BBZ)