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From War to Classroom: PTSD and Depression in Formerly Abducted Youth in Uganda
- Source :
- Frontiers in Psychiatry, Frontiers in Psychiatry, Vol 6 (2015)
- Publication Year :
- 2014
-
Abstract
- Background: Trained local screeners assessed the mental-health status of male and female students in Northern Ugandan schools. The study aimed to disclose potential differences in mental health-related impairment in two groups, former child soldiers (n = 354) and other war-affected youth (n = 489), as well as to separate factors predicting mental suffering in learners.Methods: Participants were randomly selected. We used the Post-Traumatic Diagnostic Scale to assess symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and for potential depression the respective section of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist with a locally validated cut-off.Results: Almost all respondents had been displaced at least once in their life. 30% of girls and 50% of the boys in the study reported past abduction history. Trauma exposure was notably higher in the group of abductees. In former child soldiers, a PTSD rate of 32% was remarkably higher than that for non-abductees (12%). Especially in girls rates of potential depression were double those in the group of former abductees (17%) than in the group of non-abductees (8%). In all groups, trauma exposure increased the risk of developing PTSD. A path-analytic model for developing PTSD and potential depression revealed both previous trauma exposure as well as duration of abduction to have significant influences on trauma-related mental suffering. Findings also suggest that in Northern Ugandan schools trauma spectrum disorders are common among war-affected learners.Conclusions: Therefore, it is suggested the school context should be used to provide mental-health support structures within the education system for war-affected youth at likely risk of developing war-related mental distress.
- Subjects :
- Psychiatry
war-affected youth
Depression
lcsh:RC435-571
education
education systems
abduction
PTSD
war-trauma exposure
post-conflict mental-health support programs
child soldiers, war-affected youth, PTSD, war-trauma exposure, post-conflict mental-health support programs
Psychiatry and Mental health
ddc:150
trauma exposure
lcsh:Psychiatry
child soldiers
Original Research
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 16640640
- Volume :
- 6
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Frontiers in psychiatry
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid.dedup....6332ed51b972e3deafcb4680ce5fc3bb