“…[ 16 ] that have shown a deterioration in parents’ psychological well-being due to COVID-19 pandemic, which significantly affected children’s psychological well-being through the resulting increase of parenting stress levels [ 5 , 29 , 53 ]. In this field, clinicians and researchers rooted in the Developmental Psychopathological framework have widely suggested that parental psychopathological difficulties may affect children’s emotional-adaptive functioning in a cascading way [ 64 ], from the transmission of predisposition to (epi-)genetic vulnerabilities [ 65 , 66 ], to children’s exposure to an adverse affective family environment [ 67 , 68 , 69 ], including poor quality of parent-child interactions [ 30 , 70 , 71 ], family functioning [ 72 , 73 , 74 , 75 ], and high parenting stress levels [ 76 , 77 ]. Recently, cascading effects have also been suggested in the context of COVID-19: The psychological impact of COVID-19 on parents may negatively influence parenting and related stress levels, which in turn may place children at higher risk of psychopathological symptoms [ 50 ].…”