Zima B T, Wells K B, Freeman H E
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of California at Los Angeles.
Am J Public Health. 1994 Feb;84(2):260-4. doi: 10.2105/ajph.84.2.260.
Few studies have estimated the extent of specific emotional, behavioral, and academic problems among sheltered homeless children. The objectives of this study were to describe such problems, identify those children with the problems, and evaluate the relationship between child problems and use of physical and mental health services.
From February through May 1991, 169 school-age children and their parents living in 18 emergency homeless family shelters in Los Angeles County were interviewed. To evaluate the answers, interviewers used standardized measures of depression, behavioral problems, receptive vocabulary, and reading.
The vast majority (78%) of homeless children suffered from either depression, a behavioral problem, or severe academic delay. Among children having a problem, only one third of the parents were aware of any problem, and few of those children (15%) had ever received mental health care or special education.
Almost all school-age sheltered homeless children in Los Angeles County have symptoms of depression, a behavioral problem, or academic delay severe enough to merit a clinical evaluation, yet few receive specific care. Programs targeted at sheltered homeless school-age children are needed to close this gap.
很少有研究估计过庇护所中无家可归儿童特定的情绪、行为和学业问题的程度。本研究的目的是描述这些问题,识别有这些问题的儿童,并评估儿童问题与身心健康服务使用之间的关系。
1991年2月至5月,对居住在洛杉矶县18个紧急无家可归家庭庇护所的169名学龄儿童及其父母进行了访谈。为了评估答案,访谈者使用了抑郁、行为问题、接受性词汇和阅读的标准化测量方法。
绝大多数(78%)无家可归儿童患有抑郁症、行为问题或严重的学业延迟。在有问题的儿童中,只有三分之一的父母意识到任何问题,而且这些儿童中很少有人(15%)曾接受过心理健康护理或特殊教育。
洛杉矶县几乎所有住在庇护所的学龄无家可归儿童都有抑郁症、行为问题或学业延迟的症状,严重程度足以值得进行临床评估,但很少有人接受特定护理。需要针对住在庇护所的学龄无家可归儿童的项目来填补这一差距。