The International Research Program on Adolescent Well-Being and Health, School of Education, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel.
Child Abuse Negl. 2010 Sep;34(9):623-38. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2009.12.007.
This study investigates the relationship between exposure to armed conflict and terror events, and an array of mental and behavioral outcomes within a large cross-cultural scientifically representative sample of 24,935 Palestinian (7,430 West Bank and 7,217 Gaza) and Israeli (5,255 Jewish and 6,033 Arab) 11-, 13-, and 15-year-old school children. The children of the Middle East have been subjected to exposure from armed conflict and terrorism repeatedly with no adequate research or interventions aimed at shielding them from the hazards of such exposure to their mental and social well-being.
This paper studies the relationship between a newly developed scale (STACE) measuring levels of subjective perceptions of threat/fear due to exposure to armed conflict events and its predicting association with six psychosocial and behavioral outcomes covering (1) poor mental health, (2) positive well-being, and (3) risk behaviors. It also examines the role of parental support in "buffering" the effects of exposure to armed conflict events within the four target populations.
Results showed that STACE has significant and strong effects on all six dependent variables representing (1) mental post trauma, (2) diminished well-being, and (3) elevated risk behaviors. STACE strongly affects all four populations with the greatest impact among the Jewish Israeli population and the least impact shown for the Arab Israeli youth. Parental support ("significant adult") has both a direct main effect on the outcomes of all six variables as well as a significant "buffering" effect on the impact of STACE on certain outcome variables (posttraumatic symptoms, life satisfaction, positive life perceptions, and tobacco use).
Regardless of the type of armed conflict events, the perception of threat and fear that a child experiences has a universal significant negative impact on mental, social, and behavioral well-being. The importance of the existence of a supporting significant adult in exposed children's lives is also emphasized. The findings show major implications for the development of community-based interventions focusing on enhancing parental, and other adult support in the lives of children living in armed conflict regions of the world.
本研究调查了在一个大规模跨文化科学代表性样本中,24935 名巴勒斯坦儿童(西岸 7430 名,加沙 7217 名)和以色列儿童(犹太 5255 名,阿拉伯 6033 名)11、13、15 岁的儿童中,暴露于武装冲突和恐怖事件与一系列心理和行为结果之间的关系。中东地区的儿童反复遭受武装冲突和恐怖主义的影响,但却没有进行适当的研究或干预,以保护他们免受这种暴露对其心理和社会福祉的危害。
本文研究了一个新开发的量表(STACE),该量表测量了由于接触武装冲突事件而产生的主观感知威胁/恐惧程度,以及其与六个涵盖(1)心理健康不良、(2)积极幸福感和(3)风险行为的心理社会和行为结果之间的预测关联。它还检查了父母支持在四个目标人群中“缓冲”接触武装冲突事件的影响的作用。
结果表明,STACE 对代表(1)创伤后心理、(2)幸福感下降和(3)风险行为增加的所有六个因变量均有显著而强烈的影响。STACE 对所有四个群体都有强烈影响,对以色列犹太人口的影响最大,对以色列阿拉伯青年的影响最小。父母支持(“重要的成年人”)对所有六个变量的结果都有直接的主要影响,并且对 STACE 对某些结果变量(创伤后症状、生活满意度、积极生活认知和吸烟)的影响有显著的“缓冲”作用。
无论武装冲突事件的类型如何,儿童所经历的威胁和恐惧的感知都会对其心理、社会和行为福祉产生普遍的负面影响。强调了在暴露于武装冲突地区的儿童生活中存在支持性重要成年人的重要性。研究结果表明,世界上的社区干预措施的发展具有重要意义,重点是加强生活在武装冲突地区的儿童的父母和其他成人的支持。