Chronic Physical Health Conditions, Mental Health, and Sources of Support in a Longitudinal Australian Child Population Cohort

Author:

Laurens Kristin R12ORCID,Green Melissa J23,Dean Kimberlie24,Tzoumakis Stacy5,Harris Felicity2,Islam Fakhrul2,Kariuki Maina2,Essery Claire M6,Schofield Jill M6,Carr Vaughan J237

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology and Counselling, Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, QLD, Australia

2. School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia

3. Neuroscience Research Australia, Sydney, NSW, Australia

4. Justice Health and Forensic Mental Health Network, Sydney, NSW, Australia

5. School of Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia

6. New South Wales Department of Education, Sydney, NSW, Australia

7. Department of Psychiatry, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Objective This study examined associations between chronic physical health conditions (identified from hospital records) that are subject to school health care plans, and children’s emotional, behavioral, and social functioning during early (∼5 years of age) and middle childhood (∼11 years). Methods Participants were 21,304 Australian children from a representative longitudinal population cohort derived by multi-agency record linkage. Hospital presentations (admitted patients and emergency department) identified children with asthma (n = 1,573), allergies and anaphylaxis (n = 738), type 1 diabetes (n = 59), epilepsy (n = 87), and any of these conditions (n = 2,275), relative to 19,029 children without these presentations. Logistic regression analyses determined associations between these exposures and (i) emotional, behavioral, social, and overall vulnerabilities reported by teachers (early childhood) and children (middle childhood), and (ii) self-reported lack of sources of support (middle childhood). Results Prevalence of any condition in hospital records was 7.5% by early childhood, and 10.7% by middle childhood. Relative to peers without these presentations, small increases in risk of overall problems, and selected emotional, behavioral, and social problems, were apparent for children with any condition, and asthma specifically, in early and middle childhood. Large and pervasive effects were apparent for epilepsy, limited small effects in middle childhood only for allergies and anaphylaxis, and no increases in risk associated with type 1 diabetes examined in middle childhood. No condition was associated with increased risk of lacking supports. Conclusions Children with hospital records of chronic conditions, particularly epilepsy and asthma, might benefit from school-based care plans that integrate their physical and mental health support needs.

Funder

Australian Research Council

NSW Ministry of Health

NSW Department of Education

NSW Department of Family and Community Services

Discovery Project

National Health and Medical Research Council

Partnership Project

Australian Rotary Health ‘Mental Health

Young Australians’ Research Grants

ARC Future Fellowship

NARSAD Young Investigator Grant

Brain & Behavior Research Foundation

NHMRC

Biomedical Career Development Fellowship

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference44 articles.

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