Iran Daily

One in seven US children has at least one mental health disorder

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frequently, the individual­s suffering from it will not face any special problem.

“However, if it becomes a nocturnal habit, the pressure it creates gradually leads to the destructio­n of the teeth, TMJS and muscles.”

Turning to cleft lip and cleft palate, he said one in every 700 newborns in Iran suffers from one of these disorders which are more common among female infants.

Rahsepar noted that these disorders are caused due to mothers’ inappropri­ate nutrition during pregnancy and the insuf¿ciency of certain vitamins, particular­ly those of B-group.

“Experienci­ng stress, insuf¿cient sleep, alcohol consumptio­n and smoking during pregnancy are also effective in causing these disorders.”

He said individual­s suffering from orofacial clefts face a large number of dif¿culties while eating and speaking, adding they usually nasalize vowels and consonants and fail to pronounce a large number of sounds.

Rahsepar noted that the disorder is diagnosabl­e in the ¿nal months of pregnancy, adding the treatment should begin immediatel­y after the baby is born.

“In the early months after birth, the opening in the upper lip is closed surgically. Before baby begins speaking, the cleft in the soft palate is ¿xed so that the muscles responsibl­e for making sounds and speaking are reconstruc­ted and become active. Then, the jaw is allowed to grow suf¿ciently, and next, one or two years before the child goes to school, the hard palate undergoes the surgery.”

Normally, in case all these stages are gone through on time, further abnormalit­ies are prevented, he said.

“Otherwise, other jaw-related disorders will be caused which are very complex and costly to treat.”

Commenting on the holding of the 17th Internatio­nal Congress of Iranian Society of Oral and Maxillofac­ial Surgeons, he said the latest scienti¿c achievemen­ts pertaining to the ¿elds of maxillofac­ial and dental surgeries will be presented during this congress.

Rahsepar noted that more than 100 lectures will be presented during the conference, adding experts from Germany, Italy and Belgium will also deliver lectures during the congress. About one in seven children in the US has at least one mental health condition, a new study revealed.

And at least half of them go untreated, according to new research from the University of Michigan, dailymail.co.uk wrote.

In recent years, mental health conditions have been on the rise in the US, especially among children and teenagers.

Some have blamed technology, while others suggest that there is simply an increased awareness of mental health concerns.

But whatever the case may be, struggling with mental health conditions as a child — especially without proper treatment — paves a harder road to adulthood, and raises the risk of both lifelong mental illness and other chronic health problems.

The team at University of Michigan collected data on about 4.6.6 million children across the US.

Ranging from age zero to 17, 16.5 percent of the kids had been diagnosed with at least one mental health disorder at some point in their lives.

That means that some 7.7 million children are struggling with anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder, ADHD or any one of over 200 possible mental health concerns.

And several of the states with the highest rates of pediatric mental health disorder — Alabama, Mississipp­i, Oklahoma and Utah — also had the highest rates of children that went untreated, according to the study, published in JAMA Pediatrics.

None of these ranked worst for mental health, however. More children had mental health conditions in Maine, where 27.2 percent had been diagnosed, than in any other state.

Hawaii, on the other hand, had a relatively low incidence of children with such concerns. There, only 7.6 percent of kids had been diagnosed.

Too often, even after a child is diagnosed with a mental illness, stigma, cost or a combinatio­n of the two deterrents.

Take, for example, ADHD, one of the most common (if perhaps over-diagnosed and medicated) mental health conditions in children.

A 2012 calculated the annual cost of treating ADHD in children to be $2,720 a year without insurance.

Many insurers do cover the medication, but often require the prescripti­on to come from a psychiatri­st, rather than a family practice physician or pediatrici­an.

Another specialist (which might be more expensive) may mean another referral, another co-pay, another hour or more out of work and school, and so on.

What’s more, some studies suggest that children who get behavioral therapies for ADHD instead of or in addition to drug therapies fare better in the long run.

But these treatment plans are even less likely to be covered by insurers, once again limiting the access to optimal care for many families.

“In children, mental health disorders have deleteriou­s consequenc­es on individual and socioecono­mic factors and can impede healthful transition­ing into adulthood, and the incidence of mental health disorders has been increasing over the decades,” the study authors wrote.

Leveling the playing ¿eld for the care available to children across the US could give more children a better shot at thriving as they grow up, no matter where they live or what their family’s socioecono­mic status is.

“Initiative­s that assist systems of care coordinati­on have demonstrat­ed a reduction of mental health–related burdens across multiple domains,” they concluded.

 ??  ?? Dr. Behzad Rahsepar, an Iranian oral and maxillofac­ial surgeon (L), speaks to Iran Daily. IRAN DAILY
Dr. Behzad Rahsepar, an Iranian oral and maxillofac­ial surgeon (L), speaks to Iran Daily. IRAN DAILY
 ??  ?? childswork.com
childswork.com

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