학술논문

Growing up in the shadow of Chornobyl: adolescents' risk perceptions and mental health
Original Paper
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology. May 2011, Vol. 46 Issue 5, p393, 10 p.
Subject
Psychological aspects
Research
Risk factors
Infants -- Psychological aspects -- Research
Youth -- Research -- Psychological aspects
Mental health -- Psychological aspects -- Research
Medical research -- Psychological aspects
Nuclear energy -- Psychological aspects -- Research
Medicine, Experimental -- Psychological aspects
Teenagers -- Research -- Psychological aspects
Language
English
ISSN
0933-7954
Abstract
Author(s): Evelyn J. Bromet [sup.1] [sup.5], Lin T. Guey [sup.1], David P. Taormina [sup.2], Gabrielle A. Carlson [sup.1], Johan M. Havenaar [sup.3], Roman Kotov [sup.1], Semyon F. Gluzman [sup.4] Author [...]
Purpose Despite long-term research on risk perceptions of adults after ecological disasters, little is known about the legacy for the generation exposed to toxic elements as infants. This study examined Chornobyl-related risk perceptions and their relationship to mental health in adolescents raised in Kyiv in the aftermath of the accident. Methods Risk perceptions, 12-month DSM-IV major depression (MDD)/generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), and current symptomatology were examined in 265 evacuee adolescents, 261 classmate controls, and 327 population-based controls 19 years after the accident. Competing risk factors, including maternal risk perceptions and MDD/GAD, were taken into account. Results Significantly more evacuees (48.7%) than controls (33.4-40.0%) reported at least one negative perception of Chornobyl; 18.1% of evacuees versus 10.0-12.8% of controls reported 2-4. In contrast, 75.7% of evacuee mothers versus 34.8-37.6% of controls endorsed 2-4 negative perceptions. In the unadjusted analyses, adolescents' perceptions were associated with both MDD/GAD and symptomatology. After adjusting for competing risk factors, their perceptions were associated with symptomatology only (p < 0.01). Among the competing risk factors, gender, self-esteem, life events, and peer support were significantly associated with MDD/GAD. These measures, along with quality of parental communication, father belligerence when drunk, and maternal MDD/GAD, were significantly associated with symptoms. Conclusions More evacuee teens reported negative risk perceptions than controls, but these perceptions were only modestly associated with mental health. Instead, the strongest risk factors comported with epidemiologic studies conducted in other parts of the world. Research is needed to determine whether children raised in the aftermath of other ecological disasters demonstrate similar resilience.