Syrian Children in State of ‘Toxic Stress’: Report

Article  •  Publié sur Souria Houria le 14 mars 2017

A wide element of Syrian children could be living in a state of “toxic stress” due to prolonged exposure to the horrors of war, aid group Save the Children said.

The research drew on interviews in seven provinces with more than 450 children, teenagers and adults, as part of the largest mental health survey inside Syria during the war.

Almost all children and 84 percent of adults said that bombing and shelling was the No. 1 cause of psychological stress for children. Fifty percent of children revealed that they don’t feel safe in schools, or rarely do, while 40 percent stated that they don’t feel secure when they play outside. Seventy-one percent of interviewees reported that children were increasingly suffering from frequent bedwetting and involuntary urination.

Syrian Children in State of ‘Toxic Stress’: Report

Educators see that: “If the war does not end soon and children don’t get the psychological support they need, then the damage will be incurable when they become adults.”

“Toxic stress can disrupt the development of the brain and other organs and can increase the risk of addiction and mental health disorders in adulthood,” said Alexandra Chen, a child protection and mental health specialist at Harvard University.

Given that adults, themselves, suffer stress and struggle to cope, one child out of four children complained during the interviews that they find no place to go or a person to talk to when they are feeling scared, sad or irritated.

Due to the endless explosions in the country, a considerable number of doctors and specialists have fled Syria resulting in a scarcity of psychological health services.

The report concluded by stressing the importance of putting an end to the damage caused to children through eradicating the major reason, which is the continuous violence in Syria, especially the airstrikes and shelling.

« Responsibility for the information and views set out in this article lies entirely with the author.

Mar 8th, 2017 by Asharq al-Awsat (Pan-Arab, London-based newspaper)