Sunday, 28 July 2013

The effects of a natural disaster on child behavior

The effects of a natural disaster on child behavior

A prospective study of children examined both before and after a flood disaster in Bangladesh is used to test the hypothesis that stressful events play a causal role in the development of behavioral disorders in children.

 Six months before the disaster, structured measures of selected behavioral problems were made during an epidemiological study of disability among 2- to 9-year-old children. Five months after the disaster, a representative sample of 162 surviving children was reevaluated. 

 Between the pre- and post-flood assessments, the prevalence of aggressive behavior increased from zero to nearly 10%, and 45 of the 134 children who had bladder control before the flood (34%) developed enuresis. 

 These results help define what may be considered symptoms of post traumatic distress in childhood; they also contribute to mounting evidence of the need to develop and evaluate interventions aimed at ameliorating the behavioral and psychological consequences of children's exposure to extreme and traumatic situations.

1 comment:

  1. Those are definitely sobering statistics. Have you or anyone you know gone through a catastrophic event? Hurricane Katrina is the most recent event that I can think of to significantly affect the United States. I would be curious to see statistics from that event. It was so incredibly devastating to Louisiana and many of the other surrounding states.

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