Lecture 2: Trauma Flashcards
What are some types of trauma and abuse?
- Child maltreatment (physical, sexual or emotional abuse)
- Conflictual family relationships
- Witness to violence
- Birth trauma
- Bereavement and loss
What tips abuse in to trauma?
Trauma = prolonged, repeated events
Signs or indicators that suggest the possibility that a child is experiencing abuse or trauma
- Unexplained physical injury OR explanation doesn’t match up with injury
- Play that involves themes of violence and abuse
- Sexualised play OR knowledge (inappropriate for child’s age)
- Promiscuous sexual behaviour
- Rapid attachment to others
- Marked avoidance of contact with certain people or genders
- Significant acting out or
- Withdrawal
- Reference to secrets that can’t be shared
- Anxiety
- Suicidal ideas/ self-harm
- Developmental regression
- Changes in academic performance
What is the difference between type I and type II trauma?
- Type I: single traumatic event (e.g. fire, single rape episode)
>Clinical relevance: tends to have more support from family and friends; the person usually remembers the trauma event - Type II: repeated, prolonged trauma (extensive child abuse)
>Clinical relevance: child is more likely to have severe PTSD symptoms; is often kept a secret; support often absent
What is the difference between type IIA and type IIB trauma?
- Type IIA: complex trauma that occurs continuously
- Type IIB: more about parental failure/neglect/difficulty for family to support child in a functional way (parent has mental illness)
How does childhood trauma differ from adulthood trauma?
- Child may not be able to make sense of the trauma - this makes it unresolved and may carry this through to adulthood (transgenerational transmission)
Why might being harmed or abused by a family member have potentially extreme consequences?
- Destroys trust
- No safe haven
- Neglect
- Hard to seek help
- Lack of support
- Developmental limitations
- Isolation
What is more noteworthy about harm occurring for a child under 5 years of age?
The effect it has on general weight gain or growth
What is the developmental traumatology model?
Intergenerational transmission of child abuse and neglect is a result of:
- the impact of childhood traumatic stress on later development
- consequent adverse brain development
- consequent parental mental illness
- adverse parenting skills
Consequences of trauma and abuse
- Developmental delay
- Cognitive competence
- Self-regulation
- Emotional development
What are some key things about children with complex PTSD?
- Implications of pre-verbal trauma
- Never have just externalising without internalising features
- High incidence of development issues