Nearly 40,000 Nevada kids will be affected by foreclosure
RENO -- A national report estimated nearly 40,000 children in Nevada will be affected as their families lose their homes to foreclosure.
The report by First Focus, a Washington, D.C.-based child advocacy group, also found that children of families who suffer foreclosures or evictions do worse in school and have a higher risk for physical or mental health problems.
The projections were based on racial and ethnic data reported under the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act. An estimated 2 million children will be negatively affected nationwide by foreclosures from 2008 to 2009.
The report does not break down numbers by county. In March, Washoe County accounted for 8.2 percent of foreclosure activity in the state and Clark County 88.5 percent, according to RealtyTrac's monthly foreclosure report.
Dr. Ole Theinhaus, chairman of the University of Nevada School of Medicine psychiatry department, said dealing with eviction is one of the most stressful and traumatic events in a child's life. And when kids have to deal with issues in their personal lives, academic performance and behavior at school are typically the first casualties.
"Their energy is concentrated somewhere else, so school takes a back seat," Theinhaus said. "Kids feel that they have to mull over the crisis affecting their immediate environment at home instead of time devoted to homework or getting to school on time."
