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A boy cries as he recuperates after surgery during "Operation Smile" at a hospital in Manila's Makati financial district October 26, 2009. Operation Smile aim to provide free surgery for about a hundred children inflicted with cleft lips, cleft palates, and other facial deformities over a period of five days in Makati.  REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo

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    When parents die, some children suffer doubly

    WASHINGTON
    Mon May 5, 2008 4:50pm EDT

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Children who lose a parent suddenly may suffer a "double whammy" to their mental and physical health -- from the shock of the loss and because of inherited risks, researchers reported on Monday.

    Health

    They said the risk factors that contribute to many early deaths of parents -- such as mental illness or alcoholism -- can be passed on to children. Such children may be more vulnerable to the stresses of losing a parent, the researchers said.

    "Kids whose parents die early are at risk because the conditions that their parents have, that predispose their parents to early death, are also heritable and therefore they get both," said Dr. David Brent of the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine.

    Brent and colleagues studied 140 families in which one parent died prematurely and suddenly from suicide, accidental death, or sudden natural death.

    The researchers, whose findings were reported in the Archives of Pediatric & Adolescent Medicine, were looking in particular for clues that the deceased parents may have passed a genetic or environmental tendency to their children, aged 7 to 25 at the time of the study.

    "Parents who die suddenly are likely to have higher-than-expected rates of psychiatric disorder. Mood, alcohol and substance abuse, and personality disorders convey an increased mortality not only from suicide but also from accidents and cardiovascular diseases," they wrote.

    They compared the bereaved families to 99 similar families with two living biological parents.

    The children were assessed for psychiatric disorders, and their parents' psychiatric history was also checked.

    The parents who died suddenly often had histories of mental illness, such as depression, or of substance abuse.

    "I think that they had conditions that made their deaths more likely," Brent said in a telephone interview.

    "It's not the same as blaming them for having died," he added. "We know the risk for cardiovascular disease is about eight times higher for people with depression or bipolar depression," he added.

    Some of that is due to being overweight or smoking, but some is not, he said. Psychiatrists caring for patients with mental disorders need to ensure that their physical health is watched also -- especially if such patients have children, Brent said.

    "It is a double whammy effect," he said of the children.

    Not surprisingly, they found many cases of post-traumatic stress disorder among the children who lost a parent, and none among the children with two living parents.

    Brent said his team did not study the children of parents who died but did not die suddenly -- from cancer, for example.

    (Editing by Julie Steenhuysen and Frances Kerry)



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