[ prevalence of anxiety and depression disorders in the children of veterans of Shiraz, Iran: a case control study]
Qom University of Medical Sciences Journal. 2009; 3 (2): 19-24
en Fa
| IMEMR
| ID: emr-93821
Biblioteca responsable:
EMRO
This survey was conducted in order to assess the prevalence of psychiatric disorders in children of the war-wounded veterans, and to compare it with the general population of Shiraz. The present study was a cross-sectional survey on a random sample of children and adolescents of 223 veteran's [25%-70%] families between 12-20 years old. The control group consisted of students of 12-20 years of age. Diagnosis was made using semi-structured clinical interviews on the basis of DSM-IV, through K-SADS-PL. Out of 223 veteran's families interviewed, 123 families had at least one child with one psychiatric disorder. Those children, 52 boys [15%] and 71 girls [20%], suffered from at least one of the psychiatric disorders. The prevalence of depressive disorders such as dysthymia was 2.3%, major depressive disorder 8.4%, and minor depression 5.8%. The prevalence of anxiety disorders including generalized anxiety disorder was [10.1%], separation anxiety disorder [1.4%] obsessive compulsive disorder [4%], panic disorder [3.2%], post traumatic stress disorder [3.2%], social phobia [4.3%] specific phobia [2%] and agoraphobia was [1.4%]. Although the prevalence of depressive and anxiety disorders did not significantly differ from that of control group, but more studies, and more consultative, preventive and therapeutic actions seem to be necessary for children of veterans, due to a higher prevalence of some of anxiety disorders such as generalized anxiety disorder and some depression symptoms
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Índice:
IMEMR
Asunto principal:
Veteranos
/
Estudios de Casos y Controles
/
Niño
/
Prevalencia
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Estudios Transversales
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Trastorno Depresivo
Tipo de estudio:
Observational_studies
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Prevalence_studies
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Qualitative_research
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Risk_factors_studies
Límite:
Female
/
Humans
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Male
Idioma:
Fa
Revista:
Qom Univ. Med. Sci. J.
Año:
2009