Question
How did social isolation and pandemic-related stressors contribute to increased rates of child maltreatment?
Answer
Social isolation is one of the most significant environmental risk factors for premature death and harmful behavior, research indicates it poses a greater threat than smoking, alcohol dependence, or a sedentary lifestyle. Beyond its effects on individual mental health, social disconnection from the community has been identified as a risk factor for perpetrating child abuse. When individuals lose their social ties, protective buffers that might otherwise moderate stress responses and impulsive behavior are significantly weakened.
The COVID-19 pandemic intensified these vulnerabilities on a societal scale. Within just two weeks of pandemic onset, studies of broadly distributed adult populations found that one in five adults reported hitting their child, a notable and alarming shift in behavior for many who had not previously engaged in physical discipline. Employment loss and perceived social isolation emerged as independent risk factors for these changes in disciplinary behavior, even after controlling for variables such as depression, income, and demographics. Importantly, perceived isolation, one's subjective sense of being disconnected, proved to be a valid and meaningful predictor of behavioral change, reinforcing the idea that psychological experiences of circumstances can be as consequential as objective conditions.
These findings underscore why child maltreatment cannot be understood in isolation from broader social and economic forces. Stressors such as job loss, housing instability, and community disconnection do not simply co-occur with abuse; they meaningfully increase its likelihood by compressing the conditions under which caregivers regulate emotion and make disciplinary decisions.
This Ask the Expert is an edited excerpt from the course, "The Sociology of Child Abuse & Evidence-Based Prevention," presented by Sophie Nathenson, PhD.