| Literature DB >> 31413728 |
Ashmita Chaulagain1, Arun Kunwar2, Sarah Watts3, Anthony P S Guerrero4, Norbert Skokauskas1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Globally, 10-20% of children and adolescents suffer from mental disorders, with half of all them starting by the age of 14 and three-quarters before the age of 25. In Nepal, 40% of the population is younger than 18 years of age, and as such there is a large proportion of the population that is at risk of developing a mental disorder. There has been a recent recognition of child and adolescent mental health problems in Nepal, although prior to this it had remained almost invisible on the health agenda. In response to growing concern, there is a need to conduct a review on children and adolescent mental health problems in Nepal.Entities:
Keywords: Child and adolescent; Mental disorder; Mental health; Nepal; Psychiatry
Year: 2019 PMID: 31413728 PMCID: PMC6689861 DOI: 10.1186/s13033-019-0310-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the literature search
Epidemiological study of child and adolescent mental health problems in Nepal
| Study | Study design | Diagnostic tool | Study sample | Sample size (n) | Age range | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acharya et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Trauma exposure questionnaire and Child PTSD scale (CPSS) | Community-base sample | 800 | 7–16 | PTSD-51% among school-aged children in Kathmandu district |
| Kohrt et al. [ | Cohort study | Depression Self Rating Scale SCARED-5 Child PTSD symptom scale (CPSS) Strength and Difficulties Questionnaire Function Impairment tool | Former child solider vs Community-base sample | Case 141 former child soldiers, 141 never conscripted children | Not available | 53.2% of child soldiers had depression, anxiety-46.1%, PTSD symptoms-55.3%, Psychological difficulties-39%, and function impairment-62.4% Child soldiers had greater odds of meeting cutoff for depression (OR = 3.56, 95% CI 2.33–5.43), PTSD, Psychological difficulties (OR = 2.91, 95% CI 1.53–5.51), and function impairment (OR = 2.04, 95% CI 1.41–2.96) |
| Ojha et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Child Behaviour Checklist 6.18 | Homeless children | 126 | 6–18 | Emotional and behavioural problem-28.6% Conduct problem was most common among male children 8.77%, followed by ODD 5.26%, ADHD 3.5%, Anxiety 3.50% Anxiety was most common in female children 13.04%, followed by depression 7.24%, conduct 4.34% |
| Heys et al. [ | Cross sectional | Autism Quotient-10 translated version in Nepali | General Population | 4098 | 10–13 | 14 out of 4098 children scored greater than 6 out of 10, indicative of autistic symptomatology Estimated true prevalence of Autism is 3 in per 1000 (95% CI 2–5 in 1000) |
| Silwal et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Child Posttraumatic-Stress Disorder Scale (CPSS) Depression Self Rating Scale (DSRS) | School-based sample | 893 | 11–17 | The prevalence of PTSS in the Sindhupalchok and Kathmandu districts were 39.5% and 10.7%, and depression symptoms were 40.4% and 23.2% respectively |
| Timalsina et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Paediatric Symptoms Checklist (Y-PSC) | School-based sample | 287 | 12–19 | 12.09% of the adolescent had psychosocial problems While categorizing the psychosocial problems, Internalizing problems (44.6%), ADHD (25.8%) and externalizing problems (4.2%) |
| Bista et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Paediatric Symptoms Checklist (Y-PSC) | School-based sample | 787 | 11–19 | 17.03% of adolescent had psychosocial dysfunction |
Clinical study of child and adolescent mental disorder in Nepal
| Study | Study design | Diagnostic tool | Sample size | Age range | Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rimal et al. [ | Cross-sectional study | Strength and Difficulty Questionnaire Spence Anxiety Scale Vanderbilt rating scale for ADHD | 85 | Not available | Speech and language delay-22.4% Behavioral problem- 21.2%, anxiety disorders-18.8%, cerebral palsy-14.1% global developmental delay-11.8%, ASD-10.6% ADHD-10%, Adjustment problem-8.2%, Depression-4.7%, Conversion disorder-9.4% |
| Rimal and Pokahrel [ | Cross-sectional study | ADHD rating scale with DSM-IV classification Spence anxiety scale child and parent rated version Strength and Difficulty Questionnaire | 350 | Not available | The yearly prevalence of ADHD in clinical sample was-11.7% with male: female ratio of 4:1 Associated comorbidities: Sleep problem 12 (29.3%), Learning difficulty 10 (24.4%), Anxiety disorder 10 (24.4), Oppositional Defiant Disorder 9 (22%), Autism Spectrum Disorder 5 (12%), speech delay 6 (14.6%), and 4 (10%) had associated tics |
| Risal et al. [ | Retrospective study | ICD-10 | 168 | Below 18 years of age | Dissociative disorder (15%), Seizure disorder (15%), Depressive disorder (13.8%), Intentional Self Harm (13.8%) |