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- W2789379149 abstract "Armed conflicts have a devastating impact on the mental health of affected populations. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression are the most common mental disorders in the aftermath of war for both adults and children, occurring in up to one third of the people directly exposed to traumatic war experiences1. Exposure to traumatic events is the most important risk factor in this context. However, for children in particular, the detrimental effects of war trauma are not restricted to specific mental health diagnoses, but include a broad and multifaceted set of developmental outcomes that compromise family and peer relations as well as school performance and general life satisfaction. To understand a child's development in a war or post-war environment, we have to apply a socio-ecological perspective2, which takes into account not only the direct consequences of the war for the individual child, but also variables in the proximal and distal environments, including the family and the community3. Today's wars almost exclusively affect low-resource countries and are typically associated with a number of risk factors at various ecological levels, e.g. extreme poverty, a lack of resources for health provisioning, a breakdown of the school system, as well as increased rates of family and community violence. Children are particularly sensitive to such an accumulation of stressors: in fact, there is considerable evidence for a dose-response relation between the amount of stressors experienced by children and their impairments in different areas of adaptation, such as mental and physical health, academic achievement and social relationships4. Family functioning seems to play a key role in the interplay of risk and protection factors across ecological levels. War is associated with elevated levels of family violence against children5 as well as increased rates of intimate partner violence against women6. In addition, violence related to both the war and family conflicts contributes independently to children's psychopathology. This includes PTSD, depression symptoms as well as internalizing and externalizing behavior problems4. A key question refers to the mechanisms behind this “cycle of violence” in the aftermath of war. How are the exposure to violent conflict and increased rates of child maltreatment interlinked? So far, studies have focused mainly on intergenerational effects, i.e. parental trauma and psychopathology as potential mediators. Evidence suggests that exposure to organized violence and psychopathology associated with these experiences might act as a catalyst for domestic violence and child maltreatment. In particular, PTSD symptoms, such as irritability and outbursts of anger, as well as elevated rates of alcohol consumption in parents, may contribute to higher levels of child abuse. In line with this hypothesis, studies in post-war Sri Lanka and Uganda have shown that, next to parents’ own experiences of child abuse, children's reports of maltreatment were associated with the parents’ exposure to war and their PTSD symptom severity as well as with male guardian's alcohol consumption7. Research, so far, has neglected a further pathway by which war trauma could translate into increased levels of family violence. It might be the child's own war exposure and related psychopathology that increase the risk of experiencing violence at home. Children who grow up in the midst of war are at greater risk of developing challenging behavior problems associated with their traumatization, e.g. irritability, outbursts of anger, internalizing and externalizing symptoms. Their mental health problems are typically accompanied by functional impairments that compromise their ability to perform well at school, carry out household duties, and engage in social relationships. All of these difficulties could make war-traumatized children more challenging to manage for their parents, who, in turn, may apply more violent and coercive parenting strategies. Consistent with this hypothesis, a recent study with Tamil families in post-war Sri Lanka found that children's exposure to mass trauma and child psychopathology were the main predictors of children's self-reported victimization in their families, even after controlling for parental trauma and parental mental health5. The notion that stressors from different ecological contexts interact with each other is supported by earlier longitudinal data on maltreated children, which showed that children's externalizing behavior uniquely predicted later exposure to community violence8. These findings have important implications for future research with war-affected children and their families. Instead of focusing on mental health problems as a mere outcome of war trauma in children, they should be considered as a potential risk factor for the experience of further adversities at a different ecological level, i.e. the family. Applying a risk and protection perspective to the study of child mental health in a post-war context requires considering potentially protective factors that, again, may be found at various ecological levels. The family in particular may not only act as a stressor, in the case of family violence, but also foster children's resilience through care and warmth. There is some evidence that this is also valid in war-torn populations. Sriskandarajah et al9 showed that, in a context of multiple trauma caused by war and natural disaster, parental care moderates the relation between children's trauma severity and their internalizing behavior problems. Children who reported their parents to be highly caring did not show a significant increase in internalizing problems related to exposure to mass trauma. Likewise, data from families in post-war Uganda revealed that the effect of war trauma on children's psychopathology was partially mediated by lower child-perceived care from female guardians10. We can conclude that children and families living in or fleeing war regions have a high probability of suffering from mental health problems. This is because they are confronted with an accumulation of risk factors at different socio-ecological levels. Parenting practices seem to play a crucial role for children's psychological wellbeing in a war context, both as a risk and a protective factor. Consequently, adequate health care programs for war-traumatized communities require both individual and family level approaches. The latter would assess and address potential problems between parents as well as in parent-child relationships. This might halt a potential vicious circle of war trauma, psychopathology and dysfunctional family dynamics, including the maltreatment of women and children. Claudia Catani Department of Psychology, Bielefeld University, Bielefeld, Germany" @default.
- W2789379149 created "2018-03-29" @default.
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- W2789379149 date "2018-01-19" @default.
- W2789379149 modified "2023-10-09" @default.
- W2789379149 title "Mental health of children living in war zones: a risk and protection perspective" @default.
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- W2789379149 doi "https://doi.org/10.1002/wps.20496" @default.
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