Separation anxiety in children with missing for their parents as a result of terrorist and military actions

Authors

  • Atheer Adie slman
  • Haidr Lazem AL kenany

Abstract

The concern one of the features that characterized this era where increased
research that I've ever had as a period diseases where there is no person is
immune or has immunity against any kind of forms or any level of levels and
perhaps the most important category affected by this scourge is the children's
category if we remember that our society burdened with legacies large and expected to tasks child elastic juicy object but is affected by faster than the
big person of any change occurs in the environment and in particular those
resulting from lost dear person and where recent research emphasized the
importance of the relationship between the child and the parent where the
child tells the feelings of unity and separation in his childhood and separation
anxiety It is more common than expected with an estimated global statistics
that the rate of 3-4% of children have suffered from it for a period of quite a
few. Targeted research building measure of separation anxiety in children
who have lost their parents as a result of terrorist and military actions, which
have been identified behavioral components after determining the theoretical
principles - then the number of paragraphs were verified validity and
reliability and became the measure in its final form consists of a 25-paragraph
has been applied to (100) students who have lost their parents, where the
results showed that the A-sample generally suffer from separation anxiety (b)
that the females are more affected than males concern the separation.

Published

2020-10-05

How to Cite

Adie slman أ., & Lazem AL kenany ح. (2020). Separation anxiety in children with missing for their parents as a result of terrorist and military actions. Mustansiriyah Journal for Sciences and Education, 17(4), 107–128. Retrieved from https://edumag.uomustansiriyah.edu.iq/index.php/mjse/article/view/552

Issue

Section

Research Article