Study finds COVID lockdowns hurt kids far more than officials were willing to admit
Children's mental health unsurprisingly plummeted when they were forced to stay home during the COVID-19 pandemic, a recent study has discovered.
Using medical claim data from a large private health insurer in
Young girls were especially impacted by the pandemic, the study found.
"School closures during the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted children's education, socialization, and access to mental health resources, raising concerns about long-term effects on [children's] mental health," the study stated. "In-person learning is an important component of children's mental health."
Medical spending and prescriptions issued for mental health concerns began declining about four months after schools reopened, dropping further after six months, according to the
For most of the pandemic, discussing the downsides of prolonged school closures was treated as socially and professionally off-limits. One co-author of the study expressed frustration that people were not open to those conversations at the time, saying they were often "immediately jumping to very political, hyperpartisan responses."
"This is definitely a piece of evidence that I wish we'd had at the beginning of the pandemic to inform the conversations we were having," Dr.
"The hope really is to inform policymaking the next time around," Hamad added.
Others are less sure about the correlation. Economist
"There is a delay which makes me wonder what else they could be picking up,"
The academic impact on students from the pandemic has already been well documented. Even in 2024, less than a third of students in fourth and eighth grades can read at a proficient level. A large portion of students are failing to meet even basic math benchmarks.
Content created by



'Spiraling health care costs': Senate declines to act to defuse Democrats' looming Obamacare crisis
Mainers face steep 2026 health insurance hikes
Advisor News
- Trump proposes retirement savings plan for Americans without one
- Millennials seek trusted financial advice as they build and inherit wealth
- NAIFA: Financial professionals are essential to the success of Trump Accounts
- Changes, personalization impacting retirement plans for 2026
- Study asks: How do different generations approach retirement?
More Advisor NewsAnnuity News
- Regulators ponder how to tamp down annuity illustrations as high as 27%
- Annual annuity reviews: leverage them to keep clients engaged
- Symetra Enhances Fixed Indexed Annuities, Introduces New Franklin Large Cap Value 15% ER Index
- Ancient Financial Launches as a Strategic Asset Management and Reinsurance Holding Company, Announces Agreement to Acquire F&G Life Re Ltd.
- FIAs are growing as the primary retirement planning tool
More Annuity NewsHealth/Employee Benefits News
- CT hospital, health insurer ink coverage contract. What it means for patients.
- FROM THE SENATE FLOOR, SENATOR COLLINS INTRODUCES THE WE CAN'T WAIT ACT
- SENATORS COLLINS, HASSAN INTRODUCE BIPARTISAN LEGISLATION TO ALLOW DISABLED AMERICANS TO RECEIVE DISABILITY INSURANCE DURING WAITING PERIOD
- Red and blue states want to lLimit AI in insurance; Trump wants to limit states
- Researchers from Boston University Report Findings in Managed Care (Unexplained Pauses In Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Surveillance: Erosion of the Public Evidence Base for Health Policy): Managed Care
More Health/Employee Benefits NewsLife Insurance News