Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma

Background: Exposure to acute, potentially traumatic events is an unfortunately common experience for children and adolescents. Posttraumatic stress (PTS) responses following acute trauma can have an ongoing impact on child development and well-being. Early intervention to prevent or reduce PTS resp...

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Main Author: Nancy Kassam-Adams
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2014-07-01
Series:European Journal of Psychotraumatology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ejpt.net/index.php/ejpt/article/download/22757/pdf_1
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spelling doaj-b653574128e24486a8abf3a4b0cd25382020-11-24T21:47:56ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEuropean Journal of Psychotraumatology2000-80662014-07-01501910.3402/ejpt.v5.2275722757Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute traumaNancy Kassam-Adams0 Center for Injury Research and Prevention, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, PA, USABackground: Exposure to acute, potentially traumatic events is an unfortunately common experience for children and adolescents. Posttraumatic stress (PTS) responses following acute trauma can have an ongoing impact on child development and well-being. Early intervention to prevent or reduce PTS responses holds promise but requires careful development and empirical evaluation. Objectives: The aims of this review paper are to present a framework for thinking about the design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children who have been exposed to acute trauma; highlight targets for early intervention; and describe next steps for research and practice. Results and conclusions: Proposed early intervention methods must (1) have a firm theoretical grounding that guides the design of intervention components; (2) be practical for delivery in peri-trauma or early post-trauma contexts, which may require creative models that go outside of traditional means of providing services to children; and (3) be ready for evaluation of both outcomes and mechanisms of action. This paper describes three potential targets for early intervention—maladaptive trauma-related appraisals, excessive early avoidance, and social/interpersonal processes—for which there is theory and evidence suggesting an etiological role in the development or persistence of PTS symptoms in children.http://www.ejpt.net/index.php/ejpt/article/download/22757/pdf_1preventionearly interventionacute traumatic stresschildrenadolescents
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nancy Kassam-Adams
spellingShingle Nancy Kassam-Adams
Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
European Journal of Psychotraumatology
prevention
early intervention
acute traumatic stress
children
adolescents
author_facet Nancy Kassam-Adams
author_sort Nancy Kassam-Adams
title Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
title_short Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
title_full Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
title_fullStr Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
title_full_unstemmed Design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
title_sort design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children exposed to acute trauma
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series European Journal of Psychotraumatology
issn 2000-8066
publishDate 2014-07-01
description Background: Exposure to acute, potentially traumatic events is an unfortunately common experience for children and adolescents. Posttraumatic stress (PTS) responses following acute trauma can have an ongoing impact on child development and well-being. Early intervention to prevent or reduce PTS responses holds promise but requires careful development and empirical evaluation. Objectives: The aims of this review paper are to present a framework for thinking about the design, delivery, and evaluation of early interventions for children who have been exposed to acute trauma; highlight targets for early intervention; and describe next steps for research and practice. Results and conclusions: Proposed early intervention methods must (1) have a firm theoretical grounding that guides the design of intervention components; (2) be practical for delivery in peri-trauma or early post-trauma contexts, which may require creative models that go outside of traditional means of providing services to children; and (3) be ready for evaluation of both outcomes and mechanisms of action. This paper describes three potential targets for early intervention—maladaptive trauma-related appraisals, excessive early avoidance, and social/interpersonal processes—for which there is theory and evidence suggesting an etiological role in the development or persistence of PTS symptoms in children.
topic prevention
early intervention
acute traumatic stress
children
adolescents
url http://www.ejpt.net/index.php/ejpt/article/download/22757/pdf_1
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