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Pandemic parenting: How COVID school, screens, stress impacts kids

Experts say this is what children need to survive the COVID-19 pandemic USA TODAY spoke with experts in child development on how remote school, reduced socialization and increased screen time is affecting kids. Alia E. Dastagir and Alia Wong, USA TODAY Published 4:22 pm UTC Dec. 22, 2020 It has been almost a year of pandemic parenting, an all-consuming, ever-changing chaos that has tested American families in unprecedented ways. Schools closed, then opened, then closed again. Playdates were fewer and fraught with new rules. Working parents often did their jobs without child care, while parents of teens did their best to buffer against a litany of losses – friends, sports, proms, graduations. For many low-income families, COVID-19 exacerbated existing hardships, and toxic stress trickled down from parent to child. 

Behind the front lines, props to Baltimore s arabbers, among others, for distributing face masks to ward off the virus | COMMENTARY

Behind the front lines, props to Baltimore s arabbers, among others, for distributing face masks to ward off the virus | COMMENTARY
baltimoresun.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from baltimoresun.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Experts say this is what children need to survive the COVID-19 pandemic

Experts say this is what children need to survive the COVID-19 pandemic Alia E. Dastagir and Alia Wong, USA TODAY © Getty Images/unsplash/Photoillustration: Veronica Bravo Kids stress topper It has been almost a year of pandemic parenting, an all-consuming, ever-changing chaos that has tested American families in unprecedented ways. Schools closed, then opened, then closed again. Playdates were fewer and fraught with new rules. Working parents often did their jobs without child care, while parents of teens did their best to buffer against a litany of losses – friends, sports, proms, graduations. For many low-income families, COVID-19 exacerbated existing hardships, and toxic stress trickled down from parent to child. 

The pandemic hurt our kids How much?

Experts say this is what children need to survive the COVID-19 pandemic Alia E. Dastagir and Alia Wong, USA TODAY © Getty Images/unsplash/Photoillustration: Veronica Bravo Kids stress topper It has been almost a year of pandemic parenting, an all-consuming, ever-changing chaos that has tested American families in unprecedented ways. Schools closed, then opened, then closed again. Playdates were fewer and fraught with new rules. Working parents often did their jobs without child care, while parents of teens did their best to buffer against a litany of losses – friends, sports, proms, graduations. For many low-income families, COVID-19 exacerbated existing hardships, and toxic stress trickled down from parent to child. 

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