4.5 Article

Teacher-reported emotional and behavioural problems and ethnic background associated with children's psychosocial care use: a longitudinal population-based study

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EUROPEAN CHILD & ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY
卷 32, 期 7, 页码 1263-1271

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00787-021-01937-w

关键词

Psychosocial support systems; Psychosocial intervention; Social determinants of health; Health services needs and demand; School teachers

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Approximately 15% of children in Western countries have emotional and behavioral problems. However, not all children receive the psychosocial care they need, especially children with a non-Western background. There is a significant association between teacher-reported problems and the use of psychosocial care, regardless of mother-reported problems. Ethnic background does not moderate this association.
Approximately, 15% of children in Western countries suffer from emotional and behavioural problems. However, not all children receive the psychosocial care they need, especially children with a non-Western background experience an unmet need for care. This might be because parents of non-Western children report a lower need for care than parents of Western children, unrelated to the actual need. This study examined the association between teacher-reported problems and psychosocial care use, independent of mother-reported problems. Further, the role of ethnic background in this association was investigated. The study sample of 9-year-old children was retrieved from the Generation R Study (N = 3084), a prospective, population-based cohort of children born in Rotterdam, the Netherlands. Teacher- and mother-reported problems were measured via questionnaire when the children were 6/7 years old. Psychosocial care use was mother-reported at the research centre when children were 9 years old (8.1%). Hierarchical logistic regressions showed significant positive associations between teacher-reported total, externalising and internalising problems and later psychosocial care use. These associations were independent of mother-reported problems. Children with a non-Western background used less care, but ethnic background did not moderate the association between teacher-reported problems and care use. Our findings suggest that teachers might have an important role, next to parents, in the identification of problems and children's access to care. This may be particularly important for non-Western children, as they use less psychosocial care than Western children, despite other research showing that they generally display higher levels of problems. Directions for future research and implications are discussed.

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