School reopening during COVID-19 pandemic associated with improvement in children’s mental health
For immediate release: December 8, 2025
Boston, MA—Reopening schools during the COVID-19 pandemic was linked with significantly lower rates of mental health diagnoses among children, including anxiety, depression, and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and a drop in related health care spending, according to a new study from researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and colleagues. The benefits were especially pronounced among girls.
The study was published Monday, Dec. 8, 2025, in Epidemiology.
“Our results provide solid evidence to parents, educators, and policymakers that in-person school plays a crucial role in kids’ wellbeing,” said senior author Rita Hamad, professor of social epidemiology and public policy. “The findings offer lessons for future public health emergencies and provide insight into why mental health worsened for children during the pandemic.”
Previous studies have established that youth mental health declined during the pandemic, and some additionally hinted at the mental health benefits of in-person school during this period. Most of those studies, however, relied on surveys and anecdotes from small study populations.
For this study, the researchers analyzed health diagnoses and spending data among 185,735 children, ages five to 18 years between March 2020 and June 2021, focusing on whether children received mental health care or filled a prescription for a mental health diagnosis such as anxiety, depression, or ADHD. These children lived in 24 counties and 224 school districts across California, where schools stayed closed longer than almost any other state and opened on a staggered basis. The data was procured from the Healthcare Integrated Research Database, a large commercial administrative database with individual-level health insurance claims data, and administrative school-level data from the California Department of Education.
“Because schools reopened on different timelines across California, this natural variation allowed us to observe differences in mental health trends between children who returned to in-person school earlier versus later,” said health economist Pelin Ozluk, the study’s first author.
The study found that the proportion of children with a mental health diagnosis increased from 2.8% to 3.5% over the study period, but that children whose schools reopened had decreased mental health diagnoses relative to children whose schools remained closed. By the ninth month following a school reopening, children’s probability of being diagnosed with a mental health condition was reduced by 43% compared with the period before schools reopened. This included fewer diagnoses of depression, anxiety, and ADHD. Relatedly, health care spending associated with mental health diagnoses decreased. By the ninth month following a school’s reopening, non-drug medical spending decreased by 11%; spending on psychiatric drugs decreased by 8%; and spending on ADHD-specific drugs decreased by 5%.
The researchers also observed that girls’ mental health benefited more from school reopenings than boys’. “This was one of our most striking findings,” Ozluk said, “underscoring how essential school-based social environments are for girls’ wellbeing.”
The researchers posited several potential reasons for why school closings may have impacted children’s mental health, including changes in social interaction; irregular sleep patterns; increased screen time; less balanced diets; learning difficulties; familial difficulties due to economic hardship or increased time spent at home together; and less access to mental health services normally available through school.
“As we consider future public health emergencies, this study suggests we need to prioritize safe school reopenings and ensure children have access to the social and emotional resources that schools provide,” Hamad said. “Policies should focus not only on infection control, but also on the mental wellbeing of children, recognizing that schools are a critical part of their support system.”
The researchers noted that the study population included only children in relatively higher-income areas in California, who were enrolled in commercial insurance and had relatively better access to health care. Further study is needed to assess the relationship between school reopening and mental health among marginalized groups, among whom effects may have been even greater.
Article information
“Effect of School Reopenings on Children’s Mental Health during COVID-19: Quasi- Experimental Evidence from California,” Pelin Ozluk, Jeff Romine, Gosia Sylwestrzak, Rita Hamad, Epidemiology, December 8, 2025, doi: 10.1097/EDE.0000000000001930
The study received funding from the National Institutes of Health (grant U01MH129968).
At the time the research was conducted, Ozluk was affiliated with Elevance Health.
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