Publication | Closed Access
Chronic Illness, Psychosocial Problems, and School Absences
50
Citations
16
References
1986
Year
DisabilityAdolescent Behavioral HealthEducationMental HealthSocial Determinants Of HealthChild Mental HealthAdolescent Chronic IllnessDays AbsentYouth Well-beingEducational DisadvantagePublic HealthSchool FunctioningHealth EducationTeen Mental HealthChild PsychologyChronic IllnessBerkshire CountyPsychiatrySchool PsychologySchool Health ServicesAdolescent PsychologySchool Mental HealthChild DevelopmentChild HealthRandom Household SurveyPediatricsSpecial EducationMedicine
The number of days absent from school during the 1979-80 school year for 573 children aged 6-17 years in Berkshire County, Massachusetts was ascertained by parent reporting in a random household survey. Children with a wide range of chronic health impairments were reported as missing more school than their healthy peers (8.7 days vs. 5.8, p less than .001). Although there was a trend for children reported as having functional impairments to miss more school than those with chronic conditions without functional impairments (11.0 vs. 8.1), the difference was not statistically significant. Children with a variety of reported psychosocial difficulties missed more school than those without psychosocial difficulties for the sample as a whole and for those with reported chronic conditions. These findings document support for the assumption that children with a wide range of physical and psychological problems miss more school than their healthy peers and illustrate that the etiology of school absences is multifactoral and reflects behavioral as well as purely physical phenomena.
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