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The Effects of Trauma on Young Children

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Title: The Effects of Trauma on Young Children


1
The Effects of Trauma on Young Children
  • Stacey Ryan, LCSW
  • Angela M. Tomlin, Ph.D.
  • IAITMH
  • 2006

2
Types of Trauma
  • Witnessing violence (domestic and other)
  • Natural disaster
  • Terrorism
  • Accidents
  • Abuse/Neglect
  • Loss of caregiver

3
Do Young Children Experience Trauma?
  • Children under 12 months account for 44 of
    deaths from child abuse and neglect
  • Persistent crying is an important risk factor in
    abuse of very young children, related to shaken
    infant syndrome

4
Young children and sexual abuse
  • Infants and toddlers may account for as many as
    10 of substantiated sexual abuse
  • Appearance of sexualized behavior is more likely
    than physical findings
  • The younger the child when abused, the more
    likely sexualized behavior appears

5
Young children and domestic violence
  • Child sees attachment figure injured
  • Attachment figure cannot protect self child is
    unsure if she can protect him
  • Attachment figure may in turn injure the child

6
Assessing severity of trauma
  • Closeness of people involved to the child
  • What the child saw
  • Childs developmental level
  • Reactions of important adults

7
How Young Children Understand Traumatic Events
and Experiences
  • Cognitive and emotional capacity determines how
    child experiences trauma
  • Level of understanding can also affect memory
  • 2-3 year olds do not understand the finality of
    death
  • Young children may believe they caused a
    traumatic event

8
Clinical Patterns in Abused/Neglected Infants
  • Gaensbauer Mrazek (1981) observed 4 clinical
    patterns
  • Developmentally and Affectively retarded group
  • Depressed Group (sad and sensitive to change)
  • Ambivalent Group (rapid shifts in emotion)
  • Angry Group (emotional intensity and low
    frustration tolerance)

9
Effects of Trauma
  • Can appear immediately or after days, weeks
  • May remind young child of previous traumas,
    making reaction more severe

10
Effects of Trauma
  • Physical Self-Regulation Effects
  • Traumatic Reminders
  • Development
  • Play
  • Behavior
  • Relationship

11
Physical and Self-Regulation Effects
  • Self-regulation is important task of infancy
  • In babies and young children, problems with
    self-regulation look like
  • Sleep problems
  • Eating problems
  • Exaggerated startle
  • Hypervigilance

12
Physical and Self-Regulation Effects
  • Exposure to traumatic events seems to change the
    way the infant reacts to future stressors
  • Animal and human studies shows changes in
    hormones and brain chemicals after trauma
  • These brain changes can be long lasting, leading
    the child to feel numb or anxious

13
Traumatic reminders
  • Can be difficult to identify in nonverbal child
  • Sensory (siren, smell)
  • Dreams
  • Re-experiencing the event
  • Irrational fear of benign objects

14
Developmental Effects of Trauma
  • Developmental delays are expecteddevelopmental
    assessment is advised
  • Problems may occur in development of attachments
    and other social emotional skills
  • Regression is possible

15
Effects on Play Skills
  • Repetitive actions
  • Driven quality
  • Constricted quality
  • Preoccupation with separation, loss, and reunion

16
Effects on Behaviorinfants and toddlers
  • Increased irritability/inability to soothe
  • Sleep disturbance
  • Emotional distress sadness
  • Fears of being alone clinging refusal to
    separate
  • Motor agitation
  • Temper tantrums

17
Effects on Behaviortoddlers and preschoolers
  • Being too clingy with adults
  • Not able to be comforted when upset
  • Problems with exploration either reckless or too
    inhibited
  • Aggression toward caregivers, peers, animals
  • Angry noncompliance

18
Effects on Relationship
  • Difficulty forming positive relationships
  • Poor sense of self
  • Lowered self esteem
  • Expectation of being treated poorly
  • Loss of secure base
  • Loss of sense of trust

19
Long Term Effects of Trauma
  • Persistent grief reactions (Bowlby)
  • Protest efforts to find the parent through
    crying, calling, and searching
  • Despair lethargy, sadness, emotional
    withdrawal, loss of interest in activities
  • Detachment apparent indifference to reminders
    selective forgetting

20
Long Term Effects of Trauma
  • Increased risk for academic problems
  • Substance use and abuse
  • Early pregnancy
  • Criminal involvement
  • Psychiatric symptoms and disorders
  • Experiencing abuse as a child is linked to
    abusing ones own child

21
Abused children as parents
  • Harsh discipline
  • Failure to respond to childs needs
  • Inconsistent limit setting
  • Inability to express affection
  • Inability to enjoy interactions with child
  • Minimize or deny childs painful experiences

22
Young children and neglect
  • Failure to provide for childs physical and
    emotional needs
  • Leaving child alone for long periods
  • Leaving child for long periods with varied and
    unreliable caregivers
  • Effects of neglect can be as devastating as
    physical or sexual abuse

23
Effects of neglect
  • Lack of play and other developmental skills
  • May hoard food
  • Unfamiliar with things we take for granted
  • Expects to take care of self or siblings
  • Challenges adult authority
  • Lacks trust in adults
  • Avoids adults when upset hard to soothe

24
Expected difficult reactions to placement in
foster care
  • Previous relationship failures lead the child to
    behave in ways that alienate foster parents
  • Caregivers misread behaviors and respond in ways
    that increase problems
  • Child responds to loss of attachment figure with
    behavioral, emotional, and physiological
    dysregulation

25
Expected difficult behaviors of children in care
  • Acting like they do not need caregivers, even
    under threatening conditions
  • Acting angry when adult makes efforts to soothe
  • Turning away when hurt
  • Behaving aggressively toward caregivers
  • Behaving aggressively toward peers
  • Problem behavior after visits

26
Why do we see behavior problems after visits with
family?
  • Visits with parents are traumatic reminders of
    events that led to the separation or of the
    separation itself
  • Both the child and parent may feel anxious and
    angry
  • Supervised visits increasing parents feelings of
    incompetence
  • Child feels safer expressing angry feelings
    toward foster parent/family

27
How Foster Care Helps
  • One of the most important things a foster parent
    can do is to help young children have positive
    relationships
  • Doing this will help with development and
    behavior
  • To do it right, you have to pay attention to
    attachment

28
Arousal-Relaxation Cycle
Child experiences a need
Child feels content
  • Child feels upset

Adult satisfies need
29
Are there children with no attachments?
  • There are children with no attachments
  • It is more likely that a child have an attachment
    problem rather than no attachment at all
  • The child will develop an attachment with the
    adult that is available

30
Why do children form attachments to abusive
parents?
  • Childrens need for survival and safety results
    in attachment to any available adult, even those
    who abuse or threaten them
  • Children prefer the familiar, even when what is
    familiar is frightening

31
Insecure Attachments
  • Avoidant patterns (turning away from the
    caregiver when distressed) develop when
    caregivers reject babys request for nurturance.
  • Resistant patterns (fussy, resistant behavior)
    develops when caregivers inconsistently respond
    to the baby

32
Insecure Attachments
  • Infants show disorganized pattern when adults
    demonstrate frightening or frightened behavior
    with them
  • Infant is afraid of the person they look to for
    reassurance and nurturance
  • Infant behavior is unorganized and bizarre
  • These patterns are common when children are
    abused or they witness domestic violence

33
Long term Effects of Disorganized Attachments
  • Aggression with peers
  • Dissociative behaviors

34
Role of Foster Parent in Attachment
  • Help the child develop a healthy attachment
  • Help child extend attachment to you and
    improved behaviors to birth family, new
    fosterfamily, or adoptive family

35
How Foster Parents Can Help
  • Work with the parents
  • Avoid judgments about the biological parents
  • Provide transitional objects to child
  • Provide family pictures
  • Have a plan for the first visit

36
How Foster Parents Can Help
  • Responding to parent anger
  • Listen
  • Be non-reactive
  • Acknowledge how difficult it is to be away from
    child

37
How Foster Parents Can Help
  • Recognize that the child needs you, even when
    they do not show it
  • Understand rejecting behaviors as old coping
    methods
  • Listen
  • Put words to behaviors
  • Attend to your own reactions
  • Encourage touch, but do not force it

38
How Foster Parents Can Help at Home
  • Safety
  • Routine that shows an adult is in control
  • Soothing sensory activities
  • Stop activities that result in re-enactment
    (including television)
  • Advocate to reduce moves to provide continuity

39
Question and Answer
40
Factors in Determining Types of Interventions,
(Osofsky Fenichel, 1994)
  • Safety and Stability of Current Living Situation
  • Childs Developmental Capacities to Make Use of
    Certain Types of Interventions
  • Quality of Pre-Traumatic and Current Care-Giving
    Environment
  • Type of Violent Event or Situation
  • Acuteness vs. Chronicity of Trauma
  • Actual and Psychological Proximity of the Violent
    Events
  • Post Traumatic Symptoms in Child and Caregiver
  • Strengths and Protective Factors in Infant

41
Goals for Intervention (Lieberman Van Horn,
2005)
  • Return to Normal Development
  • Increase Capacity to Respond to Trauma.
  • Maintain Regular Levels of Arousal
  • Re establish Trust in Bodily Sensations
  • Restore Reciprocity in Close Relationships
  • Normalize Reactions to Trauma
  • Encourage a Differentiation Between Reliving and
    Remembering
  • Place the Traumatic Experience in Perspective

42
Common Intervention Needs (Osofsky Fenichel,
1994)
  • Improving the caregivers ability to attend to and
    provide for the childs needs
  • Further develop caregivers ability to interpret
    childs feelings, reactions and support child
  • Address cognitive distortions child may have
    regarding trauma
  • Assist the child in re experiencing trauma in
    affectively tolerable doses
  • Assist the child and caregiver in coping with any
    losses

43
Results of Interventions Assist Child in
Understanding
  • Stressful body experiences can be alleviated with
    help of others and coping strategies
  • Adults can support and protect child
  • Child is not to blame
  • Can talk about emotions rather than only acting
    them out
  • Life can contain elements of mastery, fun and hope

44
Methods for Intervening
  • Using Play, Physical Contact and Language to
    Promote Developmental Progress
  • Offering Unstructured Reflective Developmental
    Guidance
  • Modeling Appropriate Protective Behavior
  • Interpreting Feelings and Actions
  • Providing Emotional Support/Empathetic
    Communication
  • Offering Crisis Intervention and Concrete
    Assistance

45
Areas of Clinical Concern include
  • Play
  • Sensorimotor Disorganization
  • Fearful Behavior
  • Self Endangering Behavior
  • Aggression Toward Parent
  • Aggression Toward Peers
  • Parental Use of Physical Discipline
  • Parental Use of Threats, Criticisms of Child
  • Relationship with Perpetrator

46
Play
  • Encouragement of Play with Dyad
  • Help the Parent Understand and Support Use of
    Play
  • Allow the Parent to Be Main Supporter to Child

47
Sensorimotor Disorganization
  • Help the Parent Understand How these behaviors
    Affect Them (triggers feelings of rejection,
    anger and frustration in parent)
  • Develop New Meanings for Parent

48
Child Fears
  • Support Parent Understanding of Fears
  • Bring Attention to Cues Child Gives Regarding
    Fears
  • Develop with Parents Strategies for Containing
    Fears

49
Aggression Toward Parent
  • Give Parents Meaning for This Behavior
  • Assist Parents In Containing Feelings Regarding
    this Behavior
  • Develop Strategies for Controlling
    Anger/Aggression

50
Aggression Toward Peers
  • Build Understanding of Reasons for Behavior
  • Clinician Gives Resources for Deescalating
    Behavior
  • Empower Parents to Take Action and Assist Child

51
Parental Use of Physical Punishment
  • Explore with Parent Feelings and Concerns
  • Contain Own Emotions and Reactions
  • Educate on Reasons Physical Punishment May Worsen
    Symptoms

52
Parental Criticism
  • Focus on Effects of Relationship
  • Acknowledge Parent Issues/Feelings
  • Build Awareness of Child Experience

53
Relationship with Perpetrator
  • Educate on Child Needs/Experiences
  • Support/Listen to Parent Concerns/Feelings
  • Mutually Develop Strategies

54
What Evaluation Research Tells Us (Landy Menna,
2006)
  • Home Visiting is Critical Component
  • Need to Distinguish Between Early Intervention
    and Prevention
  • Starting Early is Critical
  • Intensity and Duration Counts
  • Ongoing Assessment is Critical
  • Services Most Effective for Moderate Levels of
    Risk
  • Need for Well Trained Service Providers
  • Use a Variety of Approaches

55
Treatment Videos
  • Discussion
  • Questions/Comments

56
Experience Case Based Discussion
  • Structured way of thinking and talking about
    situations with families
  • Method for promoting Reflective Supervision and
    Further Learning
  • 3 Phases
  • Understanding the Experience
  • Exploring and Sharing the Collective Knowledge
    and Experience of the Group
  • Summarizing Discussion and Identifying Next Steps

57
Another Way to Help
  • Speak for the babies..

58
Want to learn more?
  • Indiana Association for Infant and Toddler Mental
    Health (iaitmh.org)
  • 317/638-3501 EXT 221
  • Zero to Three (zerotothree.org)
  • The Center for Social and Emotional Foundations
    for Early Learning (csefel.uiuc.edu)

59
Contact us.
  • Stacey (yphsdir_at_cmhcinc.org)
  • Angie (atomlin_at_iupui.edu)

60
(No Transcript)
61
The Effects of Trauma on Young Children
  • Stacey Ryan, LCSW
  • Angela M. Tomlin, Ph.D.
  • IAITMH
  • 2006
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