Abstract

BackgroundPost‐traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common reaction to trauma in children and adolescents. While a significant minority of trauma‐exposed youth go on to have persistent PTSD, many youths who initially have a severe traumatic stress response undergo natural recovery. The present study investigated the role of cognitive processes in shaping the early reactions of child and adolescents to traumatic stressors, and the transition to persistent clinically significant post‐traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS).MethodsA prospective longitudinal study of youth aged 8–17 years who had attended a hospital emergency department following single trauma was undertaken, with assessments performed at 2–4 weeks (N = 226) and 2 months (N = 208) post‐trauma. Acute stress disorder and PTSD were assessed using a structured interview, while PTSS, depression severity and peritraumatic and post‐traumatic cognitive processes were assessed using self‐report questionnaires. On the basis of their PTSS scores at each assessment, participants were categorised as being on a resilient, recovery or persistent trajectory.Results PTSS decreased between the two assessments. Cognitive processes at the 2‐ to 4‐week assessment accounted for the most variance in PTSS at both the initial and follow‐up assessment. The onset of post‐traumatic stress was associated particularly with peritraumatic subjective threat, data‐driven processing and pain. Its maintenance was associated with greater peritraumatic dissociation and panic, and post‐traumatic persistent dissociation, trauma memory quality, rumination and negative appraisals. Efforts to deliberately process the trauma were more common in youth who experienced the onset of clinically significant PTSS. Regression modelling indicated that the predictive effect of baseline negative appraisals remained when also accounting for baseline PTSS and depression.ConclusionsCognitive processes play an important role in the onset and maintenance of PTSS in children and adolescents exposed to trauma. Trauma‐related appraisals play a particular role when considering whether youth make the transition from clinically significant acute PTSS to persistent PTSS.

Highlights

  • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common response to trauma in children and adolescents (Alisic et al, 2014) that is prognostic of longer-term deleterious impacts on mental health and functioning (Bolton et al, 2004; Morgan, Scourfield, Williams, Jasper, & Lewis, 2003)

  • When a structural equation model was used to model the relationship between acute appraisals and later PTSD, this path remained significant, consistent with the prospective longitudinal study of war-affected children conducted by Palosaari et al (2013)

  • Children and adolescents exposed to single-event traumatic stressors may have difficulties in processing the emotions and information directly associated with the trauma as it occurs, but this alone may not result in persistent clinically significant post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS)

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Summary

Introduction

Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common response to trauma in children and adolescents (Alisic et al, 2014) that is prognostic of longer-term deleterious impacts on mental health and functioning (Bolton et al, 2004; Morgan, Scourfield, Williams, Jasper, & Lewis, 2003). Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a common reaction to trauma in children and adolescents. While a significant minority of trauma-exposed youth go on to have persistent PTSD, many youths who initially have a severe traumatic stress response undergo natural recovery. The present study investigated the role of cognitive processes in shaping the early reactions of child and adolescents to traumatic stressors, and the transition to persistent clinically significant post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS). Acute stress disorder and PTSD were assessed using a structured interview, while PTSS, depression severity and peritraumatic and post-traumatic cognitive processes were assessed using self-report questionnaires. Conclusions: Cognitive processes play an important role in the onset and maintenance of PTSS in children and adolescents exposed to trauma. Trauma-related appraisals play a particular role when considering whether youth make the transition from clinically significant acute PTSS to persistent PTSS.

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