Mental health symptoms in youth affected by Hurricane Katrina. |
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Authors: | Roberts, Yvonne Humenay Mitchell, Monica J. Witman, Marjorie Taffaro, Craig |
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Abstract: | Natural disasters, such as hurricanes, may cause severe psychological impairment in children and adolescents, which may persist in youth who have survived hurricanes, their effects, or both. To better understand the needs of youth in the community after Hurricane Katrina, officials in St. Bernard Parish, LA, commissioned a youth needs assessment survey. The survey assessed how youth were coping approximately 2 years after Hurricane Katrina. The goal was to explore the prevalence and severity of depressive, anxious, and posttraumatic symptoms reported by youth. Based on retrospective reports from 43 youth, the prevalence of children’s mental health symptoms was 44–104% higher in the 2 years after Hurricane Katrina compared to pre-Katrina. The majority of mental health symptoms reported by youth had an onset after the hurricane, for example, 79% reported new onset of mental heath symptoms in the year after Katrina. The vast majority of these children (56%) continued to experience mental health difficulties 2 years after the disaster. Implications regarding post-Katrina mental health needs, service delivery, public response, and collaboration efforts are summarized and directions for future research are proposed. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2010 APA, all rights reserved) |
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Keywords: | Hurricane Katrina disasters mental health symptoms psychological impairment |
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