Ch.12 Trauma
Psychological abuse
(also known as emotional abuse) includes repeated acts or omissions by the parents or caregivers that have caused, or could cause, serious behavioral, cognitive, emotional, or mental disorders.
DSM-5 diagnosis of PTSD for children (over age 6) as well as adults involves four core features that persist longer than one month:
1) Symptoms of intrusion, such as distressing memories, dreams, or flashbacks that is often described as a feeling of reliving the traumatic event(s). 2) Avoidance of distressing memories, thoughts, or feelings, as well as avoidance of any reminders that arouse such thoughts or feelings. 3) Distortions in thoughts or feelings (i.e., alterations in cognitions and mood) associated with the traumatic event(s), such as elevated fear, inability to feel positive emotions, self-blame, and guilt. 4) Symptoms of extreme arousal and reactivity, such as angry outbursts, self-destructive behavior, sleep problems, or hypervigilance (i.e., watchfulness
1/3
About ________ of the childhood victims of sexual abuse, physical abuse, or neglect meet criteria for lifetime PTSD
Treatment dilemma
Access to treatment and prevention depends on admitting to or recognizing one's own culpability
adjustment disorder
Children or adults who react to more common (and less severe) forms of stress in an unusual or disproportionate manner (a short-term diagnosis (i.e., symptoms last no longer than 6 months after the stressor)
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Persistent anxiety following an over-whelming traumatic event that occurs outside the range of usual human experience
depression, ADHD
RAD in early childhood has been linked to subsequent internalizing disorders such as ________ DSED has been linked to disruptive behavior disorders such as ______
Expectable environment for younger children
Requires protective and nurturing adults, as well as opportunities for socialization within a culture
1) Adequate knowledge of child development and expectations, including knowledge of children's normal sexual development and experimentation 2) Adequate skill in coping with the stress related to caring for small children, and knowledge of ways to enhance child development through proper stimulation and attention 3) Opportunities to develop normal parent-child attachment and early patterns of communication 4) Adequate parental knowledge of home management, including basic financial planning, proper shelter, and meal planning 5) Opportunities and willingness to share the duties of child care between two parents, when applicable 6) Provision of necessary social and health services
Determinants of healthy parent-child relationships and family roles derived from these two primary developmental needs include:
relational disorders
Disorders that occur in the context of relationships, such as child abuse and neglect. Relational disorders signify the connection between children's behavior patterns and the availability of a suitable child-rearing environment.
hippocampus, prefrontal cortex, amygdala
The brain areas implicated in the stress response that can lead to long-term mental health problems include the _______________ (learning and memory), _________________ (planning and decision-making), and the _____________
Disinhibited social engagement disorder (DSED)
The child shows a pattern of overly familiar and culturally inappropriate behavior with relative strangers (Social neglect)
dissociation
The process allows the victim to feel detached from the body or self, as if what is happening is not happening to him or her
- Exposure therapy - CBT - Trauma-focused CBT* - Psychological first aid - Grief and Trauma Intervention - Narrative therapy - Modeling (Family therapy) - Education - Coping - Prevention-skills training
Treatment and Prevention techniques:
child neglect
Treatment for _____________ focuses on parenting skills and expectations, coupled with training in social competence and household management.
physical abuse
Treatment of _____________ involves training parents in more positive child-rearing skills, accompanied by cognitive-behavioral methods to target specific anger patterns or distorted beliefs
1) absolute authority over the family by the husband 2) the right to family privacy.
Two major cultural traditions have influenced the condoning of family abuse until recently:
Information-processing disturbances
cause maltreating parents to misperceive or mislabel typical child behavior in ways that lead to inappropriate responses and increased aggression
Reactive attachment disorder (RAD)
characterized by a pattern of disturbed and developmentally inappropriate attachment behaviors (Social neglect)
limbic irritability
coined to account for symptoms of internalizing psychopathology after maltreatment because of its impact on the limbic system. Symptoms of limbic irritability include somatic, sensory, and behavioral phenomena believed to be due to increased excitatory neurotransmission after maltreatment in early childhood
Stressful events
events that are less extreme than traumatic events and stem from single events or multiple or ongoing stressful situations or events
hyperresponsive to stress
excessive threat vigilance, mistrust, poor social relationships, impaired self-regulation, and unhealthy lifestyle choices
Traumatic Events
exposure to actual or threatened harm or fear of death or injury and are considered uncommon or extreme stressors
For older children, an Expectable environment
includes a supportive family, contact with peers, and ample opportunities to explore and master their environment
Sexual abuse
includes fondling a child's genitals, intercourse with the child, incest, rape, sodomy, exhibitionism, and commercial exploitation through prostitution or the production of pornographic mate-rials.
Educational neglect
involves actions such as allowing chronic truancy, failing to enroll in school a child who is of mandatory school age, and failing to attend to a child's special educational needs.
insecure-disorganized attachment
maltreated infants and toddlers have considerable difficulty establishing a reciprocal, consistent pattern of interaction with their caregivers. Instead, they show a pattern described as ___________________
Complex trauma
manifests as problems with attachment to others, emotion regulation, dissociation, behavior problems, and distorted self-concept.
Physical abuse
multiple acts of aggression that include punching, beating, kicking, biting, burning, shaking, or otherwise physically harming a child.
Emotional neglect
one of the most difficult categories to define, includes actions such as marked inattention to the child's needs for affection, refusal or failure to provide needed psychological care, spousal abuse in the child's presence, and permission for drug or alcohol use by the child.
Physical neglect
refusal or delay in seeking health care, expulsion from the home or refusal to allow a runaway to return home, abandonment, and inadequate supervision.
Cycle-of-violence hypothesis
relationship between being abused as a child and becoming abusive toward others as an adult
emotion regulation
the ability to modulate or control the intensity and expression of feelings and impulses, especially intense ones, in an adaptive manner
polyvicimization
the experience of victimization across multiple domains of the child's life
hyporesponsive to stressful events
underreacting to signs of danger or threat—indicating that their stress system is overtaxed and may be shut-ting down
Trauma-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy (TF-CBT)
Components-based psychosocial treatment model that incorporates elements of cognitive-behavioral, attachment, humanistic, empowerment, and family therapy models. - Involves a combination of exposure therapy and skill building to al-low the individual to practice more effective ways of cop-ing with intrusive memories and emotions. *
(1) Those most in need are least likely to seek help on their own; (2) these children are brought to the attention of professionals as a result of someone else's concern, usually after they have violated expected norms or laws; and (3) parents do not want to admit to problems because they fear losing their children or being charged with a crime (fears that are, of course, realistic).
Obstacles to intervention and prevention services for maltreating families:
1) The victim not only wants to stop the violence but also longs to belong to a family 2) Affection and attention may coexist with violence and abuse. 3) The intensity of the violence tends to increase over time, although in some cases physical violence may decrease or even stop altogether
Because children are dependent on the people who harm or neglect them, they face other paradoxical dilemmas:
Acute stress disorder
Characterized by the development during or within 1 month after exposure to an extreme traumatic stressor of at least nine symptoms associated with intrusion, negative mood, dissociation, avoidance, and arousal (Last for 1 month or less)! Short term
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis and norepinephrine
For example, long-term alterations in the ____________________ and _____________ systems are found among maltreated children and adults with a history of childhood abuse, which have a pronounced effect on their responsiveness to stress
1) control and direction, or "demandingness," with 2) their need for stimulation and sensitivity, or "responsiveness"
For healthy development, children need a caregiving environment that balances their need for:
PTSD Prevalence
In a large national sample of over 4,000 adolescents 12 to 17 years of age in the United States, the six-month prevalence of PTSD was 3.7% for boys and 6.3% for girls
sexually abused
Interventions for children who have been _________________ emphasize the children's needs for safety, understanding, and expression of emotional consequenc
PTSD
________ reflects the longer-lasting, ongoing pattern
Representational models
_______________ of oneself and others are significant because they contain experience, knowledge, and expectations that carry forward to new situations
Traumatic sexualization
a child's sexual knowledge and behavior are shaped in developmentally inappropriate ways.
Allostatic load
a concept used to describe this progressive "wear and tear" on biological systems due to the effects of chronic stress
Child maltreatment
a generic term that refers to four primary acts: physical abuse, neglect, sexual abuse, and psychological abuse
Grief and Trauma Intervention for Children (GTI)
address topics that are common to children who are experiencing grief and trauma, such as dreams (nightmares), questioning, anger, and guilt
Psychological First Aid (PFA)
based on the theory that children need information and support to reintegrate back into their school routine