Escueta Maya, Whetten Kathryn, Ostermann Jan, O'Donnell Karen
Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2014 Mar 10;14:6. doi: 10.1186/1472-698X-14-6.
Development policymakers and child-care service providers are committed to improving the educational opportunities of the 153 million orphans worldwide. Nevertheless, the relationship between orphanhood and education outcomes is not well understood. Varying factors associated with differential educational attainment leave policymakers uncertain where to intervene. This study examines the relationship between psychosocial well-being and cognitive development in a cohort of orphans and abandoned children (OAC) relative to non-OAC in five low and middle income countries (LMICs) to understand better what factors are associated with success in learning for these children.
Positive Outcomes for Orphans (POFO) is a longitudinal study, following a cohort of single and double OAC in institutional and community-based settings in five LMICs in Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa: Cambodia, Ethiopia, India, Kenya, and Tanzania. Employing two-stage random sampling survey methodology to identify representative samples of OAC in six sites, the POFO study aimed to better understand factors associated with child well-being. Using cross-sectional and child-level fixed effects regression analyses on 1,480 community based OAC and a comparison sample of non-OAC, this manuscript examines associations between emotional difficulties, cognitive development, and a variety of possible co-factors, including potentially traumatic events.
The most salient finding is that increases in emotional difficulties are associated with lags in cognitive development for two separate measures of learning within and across multiple study sites. Exposure to potentially traumatic events, male gender, and lower socio-economic status are associated with more reported emotional difficulties in some sites. Being female and having an illiterate caregiver is associated with lower performance on cognitive development tests in some sites, while greater wealth is associated with higher performance. There is no significant association between orphan status per se and cognitive development, though the negative and significant association between higher emotional difficulties and lags in cognitive development hold across all orphan subgroups.
These findings suggest that interventions targeting psychosocial support for vulnerable children, especially vis a vis traumatic experiences, may ease strains inhibiting a child's learning. Family based interventions to stabilize socioeconomic conditions may help overcome psychosocial challenges that otherwise would present as barriers to the child's learning.
发展政策制定者和儿童保育服务提供者致力于改善全球1.53亿孤儿的教育机会。然而,孤儿身份与教育成果之间的关系尚未得到充分理解。与不同教育程度相关的各种因素让政策制定者不确定从何处进行干预。本研究考察了五个低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)中一组孤儿和弃儿(OAC)相对于非OAC的心理社会幸福感与认知发展之间的关系,以便更好地了解哪些因素与这些儿童的学习成功相关。
孤儿积极成果(POFO)是一项纵向研究,跟踪东南亚和撒哈拉以南非洲五个低收入和中等收入国家(柬埔寨、埃塞俄比亚、印度、肯尼亚和坦桑尼亚)机构和社区环境中的单重和双重孤儿和弃儿队列。POFO研究采用两阶段随机抽样调查方法,在六个地点确定具有代表性的孤儿和弃儿样本,旨在更好地了解与儿童幸福感相关的因素。通过对1480名社区孤儿和弃儿以及非孤儿比较样本进行横断面和儿童层面固定效应回归分析,本论文考察了情绪困扰、认知发展以及各种可能的共同因素(包括潜在创伤事件)之间的关联。
最显著的发现是,在多个研究地点内部和之间的两种不同学习测量中,情绪困扰的增加与认知发展的滞后相关。在某些地点,接触潜在创伤事件、男性性别和较低的社会经济地位与更多报告的情绪困扰相关。在某些地点,女性身份和照顾者为文盲与认知发展测试中的较低表现相关,而更富裕则与较高表现相关。孤儿身份本身与认知发展之间没有显著关联,尽管较高的情绪困扰与认知发展滞后之间的负向且显著的关联在所有孤儿亚组中都存在。
这些发现表明,针对弱势儿童心理社会支持的干预措施,尤其是针对创伤经历的干预,可能会缓解抑制儿童学习的压力。基于家庭的稳定社会经济状况的干预措施可能有助于克服原本会成为儿童学习障碍的心理社会挑战。