As an initial step for promoting a mental health service for elementary school children, a schoolbased epidemiologic study on children’s mental problems and their social background was conducted.
The subjects were 3,021 students from 20 elementary schools in a rural community in Korea. The
epidemiologic study consisted of two stages, initial screening using the Child Behavior Check List
(CBCL) and a structured psychiatric evaluation. After the study, we received feedback from teachers
and parents.
The results were as follows:
1) Initially, 251(8.3%) students with total CBCL score higher than 54 were selected as problem
children. Among the 251 students, only 31 had completed a stuctured psychiatric evaluation, and 71%
(22 students) of them met the DSM-Ⅲ-R citeria of psychiatric disorders.
2) Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder was the most common problem in both sexes, followed
by oppositional defiant disorder in males and depression and anxiety disorder in females. Other
students also had borderline intellectual functioning, learning disorders, somatoform disorder, sleep
disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder.
3) The socio-environmental factors that were significantly related with mental health problems
were poor economic status and little education in parents, no family religion, and children living with
their maternal grandmother or with a single parent. Students who had mental problems also showed
low levels of social competence.
4) The feedback from parents and teachers showed that the stigma of mental disorders, limitations
of available time, and a poor understanding and lack of knowledge on the part of parents and teachers
were the major obstacles in mental health service.
Based on these results, the future direction of research and practice of school mental health was
discussed.