评估农村初级保健中儿童心理社会问题的流行程度。

Rural mental health Pub Date : 2020-04-01 Epub Date: 2020-02-10 DOI:10.1037/rmh0000130
Matthew Tolliver, Jodi Polaha, Stacey L Williams, Christina R Studts
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的:由于缺乏精神卫生服务提供者,人们认为农村地区儿童的社会心理问题高于全国平均水平,然而,这一说法的经验支持很少。本研究旨在重复显示农村地区儿童社会心理问题患病率较高的研究结果。此外,本研究评估了“农村”的六种不同定义,以确定农村的操作定义是否与社会心理问题的流行有关。方法:在8个儿科初级保健点(N = 2672)与孩子一起就诊的护理人员完成了人口统计问卷和儿科症状检查表(PSC)。逻辑回归模型检验了乡村性的操作定义与临床显著儿童社会心理问题的流行之间的关联。在控制儿童年龄的同时,采用多元logistic回归模型检验母亲受教育程度的附加独立效应。结果:农村性对临床显著社会心理问题患病率的影响在农村性的六项测量中是不一致的;然而,当影响显著时,影响很小,并且与假设的方向相反。结论:这些发现突出了基于不同的操作定义和乡村性措施的结果差异。当农村与儿童心理社会问题相关时,人口稠密地区的儿童比人口较少的农村地区的儿童报告的心理社会问题更多。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluating the Prevalence of Child Psychosocial Concerns in Rural Primary Care.

Objective: Child psychosocial concerns in rural areas are assumed to be greater than national averages due to mental health provider shortages, however, there is minimal empirical support for this claim. The present study aimed to replicate findings showing a higher prevalence of child psychosocial concerns in rural areas. In addition, this study evaluated six distinct definitions of "rural" to determine whether the operational definition of rurality was associated with prevalence of psychosocial concerns.

Methods: Caregivers presenting with their child at 8 pediatric primary care sites (N = 2,672) completed a demographic questionnaire and the Pediatric Symptom Checklist (PSC). Logistic regression models tested associations between operational definitions of rurality and prevalence of clinically significant child psychosocial concerns. Multiple logistic regression models were used to test additional independent effects of maternal education level while controlling for child age.

Results: The effects of rurality on prevalence of clinically significant psychosocial concerns were inconsistent across the six measures of rurality; when significant, however, effects were small and in the opposite direction than hypothesized.

Conclusions: These findings highlight discrepancies in results based on disparate operational definitions and measures of rurality. When rurality was associated with child psychosocial concerns, children in more highly populated areas reported more psychosocial concerns than children in smaller rural areas.

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