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Childhood Trauma

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Childhood Trauma Guidelines for Early Childhood Educators Ally Burr-Harris, Ph.D. & Matt Kliethermes, M.S. The Greater St. Louis Child Traumatic Stress Program – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Childhood Trauma


1
Childhood Trauma
  • Guidelines for
  • Early Childhood Educators
  • Ally Burr-Harris, Ph.D. Matt Kliethermes, M.S.
  • The Greater St. Louis Child Traumatic Stress
    Program

2
What is a Traumatic Event?
  • Involves actual or threatened death or serious
    injury, or a threat to the persons physical
    integrity
  • Involves feelings of intense fear, helplessness
    or horror (children may show disorganized or
    agitated behavior instead)

3
Types of Traumas
  • Natural disasters
  • Kidnapping
  • School violence
  • Community Violence
  • Terrorism/War
  • Homicide
  • Physical Abuse
  • Sexual Abuse
  • Domestic violence
  • Medical procedures
  • Victim of crime
  • Accidents
  • Suicide of loved one
  • Extreme Neglect

4
How Common are Traumatic Experiences?
  • 69 of the general U.S. population report
    exposure to one or more life-threatening
    traumatic events
  • 14 to 43 of children report having experienced a
    traumatic event prior to 18.
  • Up to 91 of African American youth in urban
    settings report violence exposure
  • 10 of children under 5 witnessed
    shooting/stabbing

5
What Makes a Trauma a Trauma?
  • Previous trauma exposure
  • Severity of trauma
  • Extent of exposure
  • Proximity of trauma
  • Understanding and personal significance
  • Interpersonal violence
  • Parent distress, parent psychopathology
  • Separation from caregiver
  • Previous psychological functioning
  • Genetic predisposition
  • Lack of material/social resources

6
Immediate Reactions to Trauma
  • Intense longing/concern for caregivers
  • Disbelief, denial about event
  • Focus on past losses, traumas
  • Emotional lability (numbltgtrage)
  • Replaying events with intervention fantasies
  • Misattribution of blame intense anger
  • Apparent indifference (minimizing)
  • Focus on gory, violent, exciting aspects of
    trauma

  • -Marans et al., 1995

7
Effects of Trauma on Children
8
Developmental Differences in Responses to Trauma
  • Infants and Toddlers (0 to 3)
  • Preschool Children (4 to 6)
  • School-age Children (7 to 12)
  • -Marans Adelman (1997)
  • -Scheeringa (1995, 2000)

9
Infants and Toddlers
  • Pattern 1 Withdraws, rejects affection, stops
    exploring environment, lacks trust in
    others,appears unattached
  • Pattern 2 Clingy, anxious, sleep disturbances,
    toileting problems, temper tantrums, regressed,
    disorganized, rages/aggression,
    crying/irritability

10
Preschool Children
  • Regressive behaviors
  • Separation fears
  • Eating and sleeping disturbances
  • Physical aches and pains
  • Crying/irritability
  • Appearing frozen or moving aimlessly
  • Perseverative, ritualistic play
  • Fearful avoidance and phobic reactions
  • Magical thinking related to trauma

11
School-Age Children
  • Sadness, crying, irritability, aggression
  • Nightmares
  • Trauma themes in play/art/conversation
  • School avoidance gt school failure
  • Physical complaints
  • Poor concentration
  • Regressive behavior
  • Eating/sleeping changes
  • Attention-seeking behavior
  • Withdrawal

12
When Stress Symptoms Become a Disorder
  • Acute Stress Disorder (ASD)
  • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
  • Depression
  • Anxiety
  • Attachment problems (RAD)
  • Behavior problems

13
Primary Symptoms of ASD and PTSD
  • Reexperiencing
  • Avoidance
  • Hyperarousal
  • Dissociation

14
Re-experiencing Symptoms
  • Child re-lives sensations of traumatic event
    through intrusive memories, nightmares,
    flashbacks, hallucinations, and reenactment
  • Emotional and physical distress when reminded of
    the trauma

15
Avoidance Symptoms
  • Avoid all reminders of the traumatic event in an
    effort to reduce distress
  • Avoidance of feelings through emotional shut
    down (a.k.a. dissociation)
  • Withdrawal
  • Sense of a foreshortened future

16
Dissociation
  • Feelings of unreality (in a daze)
  • Emotional numbing, detachment

17
Hyperarousal Symptoms
  • Significant increase in physical arousal
  • that was not present before trauma
  • Sleep difficulties, irritability, aggression,
  • concentration difficulties, motor rest-
  • lessness, hypervigilance,
  • exaggerated startle response

18
Acute Stress Disorder (ASD)
  • Symptoms of reexperiencing, avoidance,
    hyperarousal, and dissociation (feelings of
    unreality or emotional numbing)
  • Within the first month after a traumatic event

19
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
  • Symptoms of reexperiencing, avoidance/dissociation
    , hyperarousal
  • Symptoms present one month after traumatic event

20
Associated Symptoms of PTSD
  • Fears and worries
  • Depressive symptoms
  • School difficulties
  • Physical symptoms
  • Regressive behaviors
  • Behavioral difficulties

21
How Common is PTSD?
  • On average, 24 of adults exposed to trauma
    develop PTSD
  • In children and adolescents, 3 to 15 of girls
    and 1 to 6 of boys exposed to trauma could be
    diagnosed with PTSD
  • As a whole, about 6-8 of children in the U.S.
    will develop PTSD in childhood
  • About 50 recover in the first 3 months

22
Other Stress-Related Disorders
  • 80 of people with PTSD also meet criteria for
    another mental disorder
  • Other disorders include adjustment disorder,
    depression, separation anxiety, general anxiety,
    attachment disorders, ADHD, and other behavior
    disorders.

23
When Trauma Interferes with Attachment
  • Pervasive Neglect and Persistent Disruption in
    Caregiving
  • Chronic institutionalization and/or neglect
  • RAD, Inhibited Type
  • Doesnt attach withdraws
  • Multiple placements
  • RAD, Disinhibited Type
  • Attaches indiscriminantly/superficially

24
When Trauma Interferes with Attachment
  • Fear Related to the Caregiver
  • Frightening caregiver (child abuse)
  • Hypercompliant, frozen watchfulness
  • Frightened caregiver (domestic violence)
  • Dysfunctional/erratic attention-seeking (not
    comfort-seeking) from distressed, unreliable
    caregiver

25
When Trauma Interferes with Attachment
  • Death/Loss of Caregiver
  • More devastating in early childhood than any
    other time in life span
  • Presence of other attachment figures can buffer
    impact of loss
  • Sequence of Behaviors
  • Protest
  • Despair
  • Detachment

26
When Trauma Interferes with Attachment
  • General Acute Trauma
  • Disrupted attachment is usually temporary and
    responsive to treatment
  • Possible behaviors Clingy, whining, separation
    anxiety, stranger anxiety, hypervigilance, frozen
    watchfulness, excessive worry about well-being of
    others, resists leaving secure places

27
Helping Traumatized Children
  • Maintain normal routines as much as possible
  • Tolerate retellings of the event
  • Encourage children to express their traumatic
    experience
  • Handle disturbing reenactments carefully
  • Remain calm when answering questions and use
    simple, direct terms
  • Dont soften the information you give to
    children
  • Avoid exposing children to unnecessary trauma
    reminders (e.g., media)

28
Helping Traumatized Children
  • Help children develop a realistic understanding
    of what happened
  • Gently correct misattributions (e.g., self-blame)
    about trauma
  • Be willing to repeat yourself
  • Normalize bad feelings
  • Expect angry outbursts
  • Address acting out behaviors involving aggression
    or self-destructive activities quickly and firmly
  • Be patient with children and yourself

29
Helping Traumatized Children
  • Reinforce ideas of safety and security
  • Allow them to be more dependent temporarily if
    needed
  • Follow their lead (hugs, listening, supporting)
  • Use typical soothing behaviors
  • Use security items and goodbye rituals to ease
    separation
  • Distract with pleasurable activities
  • Let the child know you care


  • normally
    occurring

30
How to Talk (and Listen) to Traumatized Children
  • Children need to have their feelings accepted and
    respected
  • Listen quietly and attentively
  • Acknowledge their feelings with a word or two
  • Give their feelings a name
  • Give them their wishes in fantasy
  • Show empathy

31
Responses That ARE NOT So Helpful
  • Denial of feelings
  • Philosophical response
  • Advice
  • Too many questions
  • Defense of the other person
  • Pity
  • Amateur Psychoanalysis

32
Correcting Distorted Beliefs
  • Point out the childs distorted belief by briefly
    summing it up
  • Label how you think they might feel
  • Validate their feeling show empathy
  • Let them know how it makes you feel to hear the
    distorted belief
  • Suggest a healthier belief keep it brief

33
Helping Parents of Traumatized Children
  • Communicate with parents frequently about child
  • Encourage parents to listen to child closely
  • Encourage parents to set aside special time for
    the child
  • Recommend maintenance of normal routine
  • Encourage parents to remain calm and to get help
    for themselves if needed
  • Normalize childs emotional/behavioral
    difficulties after trauma
  • Model soothing behaviors with child
  • Assist in developing plan for behavior mgmt.

34
Grief in Infants and Toddlers
  • Experience a sense of goneness
  • Sleep/appetite disturbance
  • Fussy, irritable
  • Bowel/bladder disturbances
  • Difficult to comfort
  • May have difficulty reattaching to new caregivers

35
Grief in Preschoolers
  • Magical thinking (e.g., death is reversible)
  • Regressive behaviors
  • Reenact death in play
  • May express desire to die as well
  • Symptoms of grief may be inconsistent
  • Appetite/sleep disturbance

36
Grief in School Children
  • More likely to show depression, sadness
  • May see death as something tangible
  • Preoccupation with death
  • Begin to understand permanency of death, but may
    still behave as though deceased were still alive
  • May show aggression, other behavioral
    difficulties, concentration difficulties
  • May be anxious about wellbeing of other family
    members
  • Magical thinking remains prevalent

37
Tasks of Mourning
  • Accept the reality of the loss
  • Experience fully the pain of the loss
  • Adjust to an environment and self-identity
    without the deceased
  • Convert the relationship from one of live
    interactions to one of memory
  • Find meaning in the deceaseds death
  • Experience a continued supportive adult presence
    in the future

38
Helping Grieving Children
  • Dont be afraid to talk about the death
  • Be prepared to discuss the same details over and
    over again
  • Be available, nurturing, reassuring and
    predictable
  • Assist child in developing grieving rituals and
    in finding meaning
  • Help others learn how to respond

39
Talking about Death with a Young Child
  • Died means person is not alive anymore. His/her
    body stopped working. He/she cant breathe, walk,
    move, eat or do any of the things he/she could do
    when alive. Its forever and he/she will never be
    alive again.
  • Use childs (familys) own belief system when
    discussing afterlife

40
Talking about Death with a Young Child
  • Share memories and talk about the person who died
    when appropriate
  • Gently remind children ALL feelings (anger,
    sadness, confusion, fear, relief, guilt) are
    okay.
  • Use reminders like you did not cause this or
    it is not your fault.

41
When to Refer Child for Psychiatric/Psychological
Care
  • Showing these changes for more than 3 months
    after trauma
  • Behavior/Academic problems at school
  • Angry outbursts
  • Withdrawal from usual activities/play
  • Frequent nightmares, sleep disturbance
  • Physical problems (nausea, headaches, weight
    gain/loss)
  • Depression, hopelessness

42
When to Refer Child for Psychiatric/Psychological
Care
  • Showing these changes for more than 3 months
    after trauma
  • Intense anxiety or avoidance behavior triggered
    by trauma reminders
  • Continued worry about event (primary focus)
  • Failure to attend to personal hygiene
  • Excessive separation difficulties
  • Continued trauma themes in play

43
When to Refer Child forPsychiatric/Psychological
Care
  • Significant ASD symptoms within first month of
    trauma
  • Unable to grieve/mourn because of trauma-related
    distress
  • Inappropriate social behaviors (e.g., sexual)
  • Unable to regulate emotions
  • Strong resistance to affection/support from
    caregivers
  • Dangerous behaviors to self/others

44
Were done!
  • Referrals for Assessment/Treatment
  • Children/Adolescents (314) 516-6798
  • Adults (314) 516-6737
  • Questions/References
  • Ally Burr-Harris at Burrharrisa_at_msx.umsl.edu
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