| Literature DB >> 16756648 |
Sijmen A Reijneveld1, Carin H Wiefferink, Emily Brugman, Frank C Verhulst, S Pauline Verloove-Vanhorick, Theo G W Paulussen.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Younger children in a school class have higher rates of mental health problems if admission to primary school occurs once a year. This study examines whether this relative age effect also occurs if children are admitted to school continuously throughout the year.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16756648 PMCID: PMC1513563 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-6-145
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Background characteristics of children in the two samples
| Males | 2214 (49.4%) | 3947 (51.0%) |
| Ages (grades) * | ||
| - 5–6 years (grade 2) | 1435 (32.0%) | 7737 (100%) |
| - 7–12 years (grades 4–8) | 1701 (38.0%) | - |
| - 13–15 years (classes 1–3, i.e. secondary) | 1344 (30.0%) | - |
| Both parents lowly educated ** | 1514 (33.8%) | 1627 (21.3%) |
| No parent working 17 hours/week or over | 331 (7.4%) | 305 (3.9%) ** |
| One parent family | 372 (8.3%) | 499 (6.4%) |
| No of siblings | ||
| - no | 341 (7.6%) | 1160 (15.0%) |
| - 1 sibling | 2150 (48.0%) | 4084 (52.8%) |
| - more than 1 sibling | 1989 (44.4%) | 2493 (32.2%) |
| Outcomes | ||
| - CBCL | 4171 (93.1%) | 7737 (100%) |
| - CHP assessment | 4480 (100%) | 7737 (100%) |
* In the cross-sectional study 6 children (0.1%) were 4 years old and 5 (0.1%) were 16 years old.
** Low = less than 16 years at school (i.e. no high level technical or vocational training for 16+ years). In the RCT, data were missing for 94 children regarding parental education, and for 512 regarding parental employment status.
Prevalence rates of mental health problems by relative age at school.
| 5–6 (grade 2) | 9,069 | 17.10 (0.27) | 17.81 (0.27) | 18.02 (0.28) | 0.017 * |
| 7–12 (grades 4–8) | 1,602 | 18.73 (0.67) | 18.31 (0.68) | 18.77 (0.62) | 0.696 * |
| 13–15 (i.e. grades 1–3 of Dutch secondary school) | 1,237 | 16.88 (0.86) | 17.11 (0.71) | 17.57 (0.80) | 0.489 * |
| 5–6 (grade 2) | 9,172 | 297/2,990 (9.9%) | 367/3,064 (12.0%) | 422/3,118 (13.5%) | <0.0001 (2x) ** |
| 7–12 (grades 4–8) | 1,701 | 59/562 (10.5%) | 61/535 (11.4%) | 67/604 (11.1%) | 0.888/0.751** |
| 13–15 (i.e. grades 1–3 of Dutch secondary school) | 1,344 | 52/415 (12.5%) | 53/478 (11.1%) | 50/451 (11.1%) | 0.746/0.513 ** |
Ages 5–6 concerns the combined cross-sectional and RCT data, the other two ages only concern the cross-sectional data. Data on the CBCL were lacking for 309 children in the cross-sectional study (these did not differ from the remaining regarding any of the variables indicated in Table 1). CBCL = Child Behavior Checklist. CHP = Child Health Professional (doctor or nurse).
* Of Spearman correlation coefficient with relative age.
** Chi-square test and Mantel's test for linearity, respectively, for differences in prevalence rates by relative age.
*** Number of children having a problem/total number of children.