Prevalence and correlates of internalizing and externalizing mental health problems among in-school adolescents in eastern Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study
Gari Hunduma, Yadeta Dessie, Biftu Geda, Tesfaye Assebe Yadeta, Negussie Deyessa

TL;DR
This study finds that mental health issues are common among Ethiopian school adolescents, with internalizing problems being more prevalent than externalizing ones.
Contribution
The study provides new prevalence data and identifies specific risk factors for mental health problems in eastern Ethiopian adolescents.
Findings
24.17% of adolescents showed internalizing mental health problems, while 11.93% showed externalizing problems.
Internalizing problems were linked to being female, rural, and experiencing bullying.
Externalizing problems were associated with alcohol use and rural residence.
Abstract
Adolescent’s mental health issues are a major social burden and a significant public health issue, but they have not received enough attention in Ethiopia. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the prevalence and correlates of internalizing and externalizing mental health problems among in-school adolescents in the Harari region, eastern Ethiopia. A cross-sectional study was conducted among 3227 in-school adolescents. Multistage sampling was used to select schools and eligible students to participate in the study. A guided, self-administered strength and difficulty questionnaire measured mental health problems. Data were double-entered, validated, and cleaned using EpiData 3.1 and analyzed using STATA version 17. Ordinal logistic regression analysis was performed to estimate the adjusted odds ratio between mental health problems and their correlates. Statistical significance was set…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical, Literary, and Cultural Studies
