Dynamics of incidence of mental and behavior disorders in children of Ukraine: a 25-years’ observation experience.

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26641/2307-0404.2020.2.206352

Keywords:

children, morbidity, disorders of psyche and behavior, Chernobyl disaster, environment

Abstract

Disorders of the psyche and behavior among children is an urgent problem of modern pediatric science and medical practice. The high prevalence of this pathology may be a result of the unfavorable psychological state of society, aggressive effects of the unfiltered information and negative influence of the environment (including radiatioactive factors) on the mind and body of the child. We have studied a 25-years’ trends in morbidity of mental illneses and behavior disorders among children of Ukraine in order to determine the impact of environmental factors (in particular - radioactivity after Chernobyl disaster in 1986) on their development. We have performed an analysis of the incidence and prevalence of psychiatric and behavioral disorders (PBD) among  children from different regions of Ukraine, including radioactive regions, contaminated after Chernobyl disaster. We used methods of statistical evaluation and epidemiological analysis of statistical data about the mental health of children of the country, aquired from the Ministry of Health of Ukraine. Over the past 25 years, we have observed trend of  reducing the incidence of PBD among children of Ukraine to 3.77 cases per 1,000 children (p<0.01) with prevalence of this pathology among children from large industrial and agricultural regions of the country. We have connected this trend with significant toxic influence of environmental factors on the child's organism. The incidence of PBD in the last 25 years among children from the regions of the country contaminated by the Chernobyl accident in 1986  (especially in Chernihiv and Zhytomyr regions) has exceeded the national incidence rates of PBD and its incidence among children from regions without territories of radiological control. In early 1990s the incidence of mental and behavioral disorders was high among children affected by Chornobyl accident. But over the last 25 years the incidence of PBD has become lower and now its level is even lower than among children who permanently lived in areas contaminated by radiation after the Chernobyl accident and the national incidence rate of PBD among children. The results of our 25-years’ follow-up of PBD morbidity among Ukrainian children have shown that children with prolonged exposure to ecotoxic factors, including radiation, have higher levels of prevalence and incidence of mental and behavioral disorders compared with other children. All this testify that there is a need of a proper correction programs and special attention to this cohort of children.

Author Biographies

O. P. Volosovets

BohomoletsNationalMedicalUniversity 1
blvd. T. Shevchenko, 13, Kyiv, 01601, Ukraine

Y. K. Bolbot

SE «Dnipropetrovsk medical academy of Health Ministry of Ukraine» 2
V. Vernadsky str., 9, Dnipro, 49044, Ukraine

A. O. Volosovets

Shypuk National Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education 3
Dorohozhytska str., 9, Kyiv, 04112, Ukraine

L. E. Trachuk

Shypuk National Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education 3
Dorohozhytska str., 9, Kyiv, 04112, Ukraine

S. P. Kryvopustov

BohomoletsNationalMedicalUniversity 1
blvd. T. Shevchenko, 13, Kyiv, 01601, Ukraine

G. V. Beketova

Shypuk National Medical Academy of Postgraduate Education 3
Dorohozhytska str., 9, Kyiv, 04112, Ukraine

A. Ya. Kuzmenko

BohomoletsNationalMedicalUniversity 1
blvd. T. Shevchenko, 13, Kyiv, 01601, Ukraine

References

Kvitashvili O. [Annual report on the state of health of the population, the sanitary-epidemic situation and the results of activity of the health care system of Ukraine for 2014]. Kyiv: MPH of Ukraine, DU «UISD MOZ Ukrayiny»; 2015. p. 3-135. Ukrainian.

Volosovets OP Kryvopustov SP, Mozyrs­kaya OV. [Post-Chernobyl Trends in the Prevalence of Diseases and Morbidity in the Childhood Population of Ukraine]. World of Medicine and Biology. 2018;2(64):15-24. Ukrainian. doi: https://doi.org/10.26724/2079-8334-2018-2-64-15-24

[Recommendations of the Committee on Bio­ethics under the Presidium of the National Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine. NAMS of Ukraine]. Kyiv: NAMN Ukrainy; 2002. р. 18. Ukrainian.

Tolstanov OK. [Improving the procedure for providing psychiatric care to children]. Neuronews. 2013;2(2):4-9. Ukrainian.

[Thirty Years of Chornobyl Catastrophe: Radio­logical and Medical Implications: National Report of Ukraine]. Kyiv: DU «National Scientific Center of Radiation Medicine of the National Academy of Medical Sciences of Ukraine»; 2016:177. Ukrainian.

Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine. Available from:https://www.coe.int/en/web/conventions/­full-list/-/conventions/rms/090000168007d004

World Medical Association Declaration of Helsinki: Ethical Principles for Medical Research Involving Human subjects. JAMA. 2013;310(20):2191-4. doi: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2013.281053

Thorup AAE, Laursen TM, Munk-Olsen T, et al. Incidence of child and adolescent mental disorders in chil­dren aged 0-17 with familial high risk for severe mental illness–a Danish register study. Schizophr Res. 2018;197:298-304. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.schres.2017.11.009

Jaffee SR. Child maltreatment and risk for psy­chopathology in childhood and adulthood. Annual Re­view Clinical Psycholology. 2017 May 8;13:525-51. doi: https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-032816-045005

Kliegman RM, Joseph St. Geme Textbook of Pe­diatrics 21th Edition, Elsevier. Behavioral andPsychiatric Disorders. 2019;(Part III):185-252.

MacQueen J. Some methods for classification and analysis of multivariate observations. In Proc. 5th Berke­ley Symp. on Math. Statistics and Probability. 1967:281-97.

The ICD – 10 classification of Mental and Behavioural Disorders: Clinical descriptions and diagnos­tic guidelines // WHO: World Health Organization, – Geneva, 1992.

Wilcoxon F. Individual comparisons by ranking methods. Biometrics Bulletin. 1945;1(6):80-83. doi: https://doi.org/10.2307/3001968

6 myths about mental health. [Internet]. 2018. Available from: https://moz.gov.ua/article/health/6-mifiv-pro-psihichne-zdorovja.

How to Cite

1.
Volosovets OP, Bolbot YK, Volosovets AO, Trachuk LE, Kryvopustov SP, Beketova GV, Kuzmenko AY. Dynamics of incidence of mental and behavior disorders in children of Ukraine: a 25-years’ observation experience. Med. perspekt. [Internet]. 2020Jul.1 [cited 2024Nov.22];25(2):48-54. Available from: https://journals.uran.ua/index.php/2307-0404/article/view/206352

Issue

Section

CLINICAL MEDICINE