학술논문

Earthquake exposure, adverse childhood experiences, and psychosocial functioning in Chilean children: A longitudinal study
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of Traumatic Stress. 35(4)
Subject
Biological Psychology
Clinical and Health Psychology
Psychology
Applied and Developmental Psychology
Pediatric
Mental Health
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Good Health and Well Being
Adverse Childhood Experiences
Child
Chile
Chronic Disease
Earthquakes
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Psychosocial Functioning
Stress Disorders
Post-Traumatic
Psychiatry
Applied and developmental psychology
Biological psychology
Clinical and health psychology
Language
Abstract
The impact of an 8.8 magnitude Chilean earthquake on elementary school students' psychosocial functioning was assessed along with exposure to adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). Skills for Life, a national school-based mental health program in Chile, routinely assesses first- and third-grade students' psychosocial functioning and classroom adaptation. Students (N = 19,627) were screened before (2009) and after (2011) the 2010 earthquake with parent- and teacher-report measures and with a parent-report of four ACEs (family psychopathology, child chronic illness, family social isolation, father absence). Earthquake exposure was categorized as mild, moderate, or severe for Chile's 15 regions. Multilevel models analyzed the unadjusted and adjusted impacts of earthquake exposure and ACEs on functioning while clustering for school- and district-level effects. In covariate-adjusted models, earthquake exposure and three ACEs were significantly associated with worsened psychosocial functioning; earthquake exposure and all four ACEs were significantly associated with worsened classroom adaptation. New family psychopathology, B = 1.90, p < .001; chronic illness, B = 2.25, p < .001; and severe earthquake impact, B = 1.29, p < .001, held the strongest negative effects on psychosocial well-being. Moderate, B = 3.04, p = .011, and severe earthquake exposure, B = 2.53, p = .047, and new family psychopathology, B = 1.99, p < .001, were associated with the worst classroom functioning 1-year postdisaster. Findings suggest that both exogenous and home-based stressors can have significant consequences for children's psychosocial functioning and classroom adaptation, and routine screening helps quantify how individual students are affected by chronic versus acute stressors.