There’s good news and, not surprisingly, bad news for
children and teenagers grappling with the psychological aftermath of trauma. On
the up side, research shows that certain interventions ease post-traumatic stress
disorder and other trauma-related problems in young people. On the down side, most
mental-health practitioners use trauma treatments for kids and teens that lack
scientific support.
These conclusions come from an extensive research review
conducted by the Task Force on Community Preventive Services, an
independent group of 12 investigators partly funded by the federal government.
Its findings appear in the September American
Journal of Preventive Medicine.
To make matters worse, pediatricians and school officials
rarely screen children for past exposure to traumatic events and resulting
psychological symptoms, the task force notes. Efforts are underway to develop
web-based guides for parents and teachers to identify and help kids
experiencing trauma-related problems.
Although the review focuses on Western countries, research
has also just started to explore the use of trained non-professionals to treat
traumatized children in developing nations, where mental health workers are
scarce.
Kids with trauma-related psychological problems tend to do
poorly in school if they remain untreated or are inadequately treated, remarks
psychologist and social worker Marleen Wong of the University
of Southern California in Los Angeles.
An estimated one in eight children have experienced physical
or sexual abuse, neglect, bullying and other types of maltreatment. More than
one in three have witnessed violence or experienced it indirectly, such losing
a parent to murder but not witnessing the crime. Children experiencing such
traumas can develop PTSD or other mental disorders.
“In mental health as in education, trauma leaves children
behind,” Wong says. Minority children’s regular exposure to violence in poor
communities contributes to the academic achievement gap between black and white
students, in her view.
Evidence indicates that individual and group
cognitive-behavioral therapy reduces symptoms of PTSD, depression, anxiety and
related behavior problems in traumatized children and adolescents, the task
force reports. Cognitive-behavioral techniques include discussing or writing
about traumatic experiences, learning relaxation techniques and replacing paralyzing
fears with more realistic assessments. Weekly sessions can extend over one to
three months.
The review finds insufficient evidence to recommend any of
five other treatment approaches — play therapy, art therapy, drug therapy,
psychodynamic therapy or psychological debriefing.
Play therapy and art therapy encourage youngsters to express
and control traumatic experiences through these activities. Drug therapy
typically prescribes antidepressant or anti-anxiety medication to young trauma
victims who have PTSD. Psychodynamic therapy focuses on understanding and changing
unconscious reactions to traumatic events. Debriefing consists of group
discussions and education conducted one to three days after a traumatic event.
More than three-quarters of U.S. mental health professionals who
treat children and teens with PTSD have reported using treatments that have not
been scientifically reviewed or for which effectiveness could not be determined
by the task force.
“That’s disappointing, but it’s encouraging that a
substantial body of evidence supports both individual and group cognitive-behavioral
therapy,” says task force member and epidemiologist Robert Hahn of the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
Several studies of eye-movement desensitization
reprogramming, a controversial trauma treatment, were included in the task
force’s review of cognitive-behavioral therapy. In EMDR, patients visually
track a therapist’s back-and-forth hand movements. Treatment also includes
confronting traumas and revising trauma-induced fears. It is these
cognitive-behavioral components of EMDR, not the eye movements, that offer
emotional relief to young trauma victims, Hahn says.
Although the new review provides “important confirmation”
that cognitive-behavioral therapy quells PTSD and other problems in young
trauma victims, it will be difficult to train enough practitioners to provide such
treatment to large numbers of natural disaster and war survivors in developing
countries, remarks psychologist Mark van Ommeren of the World Health
Organization in Geneva.
Researchers should also examine social interventions, van
Ommeren says. Disrupted social networks in the wake of disasters powerfully
provoke psychological problems in children, he notes.
Social interventions include providing family reunification
services, restarting formal or informal schooling, creating group activities
for isolated children and recruiting teens for relief efforts. Such
interventions show promise as ways to assist former child soldiers in Africa (SN: 6/7/08,
p. 5).
Social strategies are much harder to study than clinical
ones are. The task force evaluated all clinical treatment studies of children
and teens exposed to various traumas published up to March 2007. Hahn’s team
reviewed only studies that included non-treated comparison groups and met other
qualifying criteria.
The final review consisted of 11 studies of individual
cognitive-behavioral therapy, 10 studies of group cognitive-behavioral therapy,
four studies of play therapy, one study of art therapy, two studies of
psychodynamic therapy, two studies of drug therapy and one study of
psychological debriefing.
Found in: Behavior and Humans
This study shows a link from childhood trauma to PTSD in combat and explanes why and how
http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,5143,700249864,00.html
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