School Absence: A Problem for the Pediatrician
- 1 June 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 69 (6) , 739-746
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.69.6.739
Abstract
Children who are frequently or persistently absent from school tend to perform poorly in school and are likely to drop out before graduation from high school. Excessive school absence has significant implications in terms of maladaptive behavior, wasted opportunities, and future unemployment and welfare costs. Epidemiologic information about this problem suggests that physical and mental health problems of students or their families are the sole or contributing cause of this behavior in > 50% of cases. Excessive school absence may signal such health problems as poor coping with or management of chronic illness, masked depression, teenage pregnancy, substance abuse, inappropriate responses to minor illnesses, or severe family dysfunction. School absence patterns appear to be a readily avilable, easy-to-use marker of childhood dysfunction which lends itself to screening large numbers of children for unmet health needs. Attention to this area of child behavior as part of routine health care will frequently uncover previously unrecognized health problems in children and their families.This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Comparison of Absentee Rates of Elementary Schoolchildren with Asthma and Nonasthmatic SchoolmatesPediatrics, 1979
- Explosion of a Myth: Quantity of Schooling and Exposure to Instruction, Major Educational VehiclesEducational Researcher, 1974
- The Multivariant Masks of DepressionAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1968
- THE EMPTY NEST: PSYCHOSOCIAL ASPECTS OF CONFLICT BETWEEN DEPRESSED WOMEN AND THEIR GROWN CHILDRENAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1966
- Health Studies—Presumably Normal High School StudentsAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1965