One in five children suffer from mental health
problems, reveals study
According to a recent study conducted in Canada, one
in five children and youth suffer from a mental disorder, but less than one-third have had contact with a
mental health care provider. Although those overall results echo a similar
study from 1983, the new study found a much larger proportion of children and
youth with a disorder had contact with other health providers and in other
settings, most often through schools.
The new study found that the patterns of prevalence
among different sexes and age groups have changed. Hyperactivity disorder in boys
four to 11 years old jumped dramatically from nine to 16 percent, but there has
been a substantial drop in disruptive behaviour among males 12 to 16 years old
from 10 to 3 percent. There has been a steep increase in anxiety and
depression among both male and female youth from 9 to 13 percent. In 30 years,
the prevalence of any disorder increased in communities with a population of
1,000 to 100,000, rather than large urban areas, and there is strong evidence
that poor children are more likely to have a disorder if their neighbourhood is
one where violence is more common.
The study also found that in the past year more than
eight percent of youth thought about suicide, and 4 percent reported a
suicide attempt.”This is a very robust study we feel represents the situation
in Canada. That means there are more than a million Canadian children and youth
with a mental health problem. This needs to be addressed,” said Michael Boyle,
lead investigator of the study published in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry.
Source: thehealthsite.com
22.04.2019
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