4.0 Article

Mental health of Bosnian refugee children: A comparison of clinician appraisal with parent, child and teacher reports

Journal

NORDIC JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
Volume 62, Issue 3, Pages 204-216

Publisher

INFORMA HEALTHCARE
DOI: 10.1080/08039480801983604

Keywords

children and adolescents; mental health; multiple informants; PTSD; refugees

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This study compares clinician appraisal of Bosnian refugee children with independent parent, child and teacher reports. From whom and by what means can children at risk be reasonably identified? Forty-eight Bosnian refugee children (aged 7-20), resettled in Sweden 1994-95, were assessed clinically by means of a semi-structured interview. Thereafter, standardized mental health questionnaires were administered to parents (Achenbach's Child Behavior Checklist), children (Achenbach's Youth Self-Report and Macksoud's Posttraumatic Stress Reaction Checklist) and teachers (clinician designed School Competence Scale and Achenbach's Teacher's Report Form). On clinician interview, nearly half of the children (48%) were identified with one or more mental health problem demanding further attention. Depressiveness was the single most prevalent symptom (31%); followed by post-traumatic stress (23%), and anxiety-regressiveness (15%). At the same time, 75% of the children were rated by teachers as quite competent in school. Parent, child and clinician appraisals of primary school children showed broad similarities. Teachers reported a similar prevalence of child distress, but identified different symptoms and different children demanding attention. Evaluation of teenage youths showed greater disparity: teenagers labeled their own symptoms more often as post-traumatic stress reactions and teachers identified few youths in need of attention. Inter-relatedness among parent, child and clinician appraisals supports the robustness of our semi-structured interview. At the same time, apartness of teacher report underscores the need to incorporate an outside-world vantage point in the process of risk assessment. Also, a more concrete presentation of post-traumatic stress reactions and a higher further attention threshold for inward emotional problems seem called for.

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