| Study of Runaways Reveals Disturbing Data on Abuse, Mental Illness | |
"We're not seeing a lot of functional homes sending kids out onto the streets,"
said Kurt Johnson, a research sociologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln,
which is conducting the Midwest Longitudinal Study of Homeless Adolescents.
"They come from a home life that's not very rosy and they decide to go or are
tossed onto the street," Johnson said. "The questions our research are trying to
answer deal with not only how these teen-agers ended up on the street, but what
the street then does to them."
According to the three-year, $3 million survey of 455 runaway teens spearheaded
by sociologists at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, runaways are far more
likely than "normal" teens to suffer from mental disorders like conduct
disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, substance abuse and severe depression.
For example, 74 percent of male runaways and 57 percent of females in the study
have conduct disorder, compared to about 15 percent of the general teen
population, Johnson said. Also, 23 percent of males and 43 percent of females
show symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder, a finding Johnson calls
"shocking."
"These people were involved or connected with gut-wrenching experiences,
including sexual abuse and physical abuse," said Johnson, who collects the data
from eight full-time survey outreach workers who visit shelters, the streets,
bus stations, malls and other areas where runaways hang out, to interview them
periodically over three years.
The ongoing research involves eight Midwestern cities: Lincoln and Omaha, Neb.;
Des Moines, Iowa City and Cedar Rapids, Iowa; Wichita, Kan.; and St. Louis and
Kansas City, Mo. Of the surveyed teens in these cities, 55 are from Omaha, 111
from St. Louis, 60 from Des Moines, 60 from Lincoln, 49 from Wichita, 60 from
Iowa City/Cedar Rapids, and 60 from Kansas City. Forty-four percent are male and
56 percent female.
The survey is the brainchild of Les Whitbeck and Dan Hoyt, two UNL sociology
professors who have made a career of studying homeless teens. They are authors
of "Nowhere to Grow: Homeless and Runaway Adolescents and Their Families," a
book published in 1999 that resulted from a previous study of 600 runaways.
The current project is in its second year and has just released its first
report. "The Midwest Longitudinal Study of Homeless Adolescents" is being sent
to agencies in the Midwest that work with runaway teens. The report contains
detailed information from interviews that the survey outreach workers conduct
every three months with runaways who agree to stay in touch over the three-year
period, typically from age 16 to 19. About 65 percent of the initial group of
455 teens have stayed in touch with interviewers, who are in many cases one of
the few adults who express interest in their lives.
During the interviews, for which the teens are paid $25, Johnson said new
insights are gained about the lives of these teens. For example, there are
different gradients of runaways, from "couch surfers" who leave home and sleep
on the sofas of friends and relatives before going back home, to hard-core
runaways with their own subculture. Most runaways stay within a 50-mile radius,
although they will travel to other cities, especially "magnet" cities like
Seattle or San Francisco, Johnson said.
The study is important for a number of reasons, including troubling signs that
runaway teens are poorly equipped for adult life, Johnson said.
"Society should worry about what we're doing to these kids by letting them live
on the street and should ask some hard questions about why we're not helping
them as much as we should be," he said.
A report summarizing findings from the Midwest Longitudinal Study of Homeless
Adolescents is available, at
www.mwhomeless.com. More detailed information is available based upon
interview information on the following aspects of runaway life:
Basic demographics
Family history
Run history
Suicide attempts and ideation
Physical and mental health
Diet and nutrition
Subsistence strategies
Victimization and victimizing behaviors
Social networks
Sexuality and pregnancy
Help-seeking behaviors
Drug and alcohol use
Deviant peers
School history and prosocial behaviors
---The Health Behavior News Service
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