Caregivers’ Traumatic Experiences and Children’s Psychosocial Difficulties: the Mediation Effect of Caregivers’ Sense of Coherence

Previous studies examining the mechanisms of intergenerational transmission of trauma have mostly adopted a pathogenesis framework; our study employs the Salutogenic framework instead. In this study, we explore the role of caregivers’ sense of coherence in trauma transmission to children aged 3 to 1...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied Research in Quality of Life 2022-06, Vol.17 (3), p.1597-1614
Hauptverfasser: Leung, Grace S. M., Lai, Janelle S. K., Cheung, Mei-Chun, Wu, Qiaobing, Yuan, Rui
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container_start_page 1597
container_title Applied Research in Quality of Life
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creator Leung, Grace S. M.
Lai, Janelle S. K.
Cheung, Mei-Chun
Wu, Qiaobing
Yuan, Rui
description Previous studies examining the mechanisms of intergenerational transmission of trauma have mostly adopted a pathogenesis framework; our study employs the Salutogenic framework instead. In this study, we explore the role of caregivers’ sense of coherence in trauma transmission to children aged 3 to 12 in three age groups. Sense of coherence has been recognized as a protective factor in trauma study, but less is known about its role in intergenerational transmission of trauma. We suggest that caregivers’ sense of coherence mediates the association between the cumulative exposure to traumatic events of caregivers and the psychosocial difficulties experienced by their children. The sample consisted of 547 caregivers in Hong Kong who had experienced trauma. Participants completed measures of their traumatic experiences, sense of coherence and their children’s difficulties. The findings reveal that the mediation effect of caregivers’ sense of coherence was observed to be stronger when their children were older. No significant mediation was found among caregivers with children aged 3 to 5 ( b  = .02, SE  = .07, 95%CI = -.09, .20, ns), partial mediation was found among caregivers with children aged 6 to 8 ( b  = .24, SE  = .06, 95%CI = .13, .35), and full mediation was found among caregivers with children aged 9 to 12 ( b  = .21, SE  = .09, 95%CI = .05, .40). The results suggest the possibility of a cumulative effect of caregivers’ trauma on their children, and we propose to enhance caregivers’ sense of coherence to mitigate the negative impact of trauma transmission.
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subjects Adverse childhood experiences
Age groups
Caregivers
Children
Data collection
Diabetes
Education
Families & family life
Intergenerational relationships
Mediation
Parents & parenting
Pathogenesis
Political Science
Post traumatic stress disorder
Protective factors
Quality of Life Research
Social Sciences
Sociology
Trauma
title Caregivers’ Traumatic Experiences and Children’s Psychosocial Difficulties: the Mediation Effect of Caregivers’ Sense of Coherence
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