Trauma memory characteristics and the development of acute stress disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder in youth

Abstract Background & Objectives The present study addresses gaps in knowledge regarding the association between trauma memory processes and posttraumatic stress responses in youth. Our primary goal was to explore the relative contribution of perceptions of trauma memory quality versus narrative...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry 2017-03, Vol.54, p.112-119
Hauptverfasser: McKinnon, A.C, Brewer, N, Meiser-Stedman, R, Nixon, R.D.V
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background & Objectives The present study addresses gaps in knowledge regarding the association between trauma memory processes and posttraumatic stress responses in youth. Our primary goal was to explore the relative contribution of perceptions of trauma memory quality versus narrative trauma memory characteristics to explain overall adjustment. Methods Children (N = 67) were interviewed within four weeks (T1) of an injury leading to hospital treatment and then again eight weeks later (T2). In each interview, the child told a trauma narrative (which were later coded), and answered the Trauma Memory Quality Questionnaire (Meiser-Stedman, Smith, Yule, & Dalgleish, 2007a), a self-report measure indexing the sensory, fragmented, and disorganised aspects characteristics of trauma memory. They then completed a measure of PTS symptoms and associated psychopathology. Results Self-reported trauma memory characteristics predicted PTS symptoms cross-sectionally and prospectively over time. At both time points, self-reported trauma memory characteristics accounted for all of the unique variance in symptoms initially explained by narrative characteristics. A reduction in self-report ratings, but not the hypothesised narrative features (e.g., disorganised or lexical elements of the narrative), significantly predicted a reduction in PTS symptoms over time. Limitations The small sample size and the absence of a within-subjects narrative control were the main limitations of the study. Conclusions These findings underscore the importance of self-reported trauma memory characteristics to the aetiology of PTSD.
ISSN:0005-7916
1873-7943
DOI:10.1016/j.jbtep.2016.07.009