BACKGROUND: We investigated the distinct longitudinal trajectories of posttraumatic stress symptoms in a sample of 167 children, who witnessed death of two mothers of their schoolmates. METHODS: The cohort was followed-up at 2 days (T1), 2 months (T2), 6 months (T3), and 30 months (T4) after the traumatic event. The children's posttraumatic stress symptoms (T1-T4), depression (T1, T3 and T4), state anxiety (T1, T3 and T4), and quality of life (T4) were assessed, along with parental stress related to child rearing (T4). Different trajectory patterns of the children's posttraumatic stress symptoms were identified using growth mixture modeling (GMM). RESULTS: Four different patterns of symptom change were identified, which were consistent with the prototypical model, and were named Recovery (19.9%), Resilience (72.7%), Chronic Dysfunction (1.8%), and Delayed Reactions (5.6%). Significant differences were found in depression and anxiety scores, children's quality of life, and parental rearing stress according to the distinct longitudinal trajectories of posttraumatic stress symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: The present study suggests that individual differences should be taken into account in the clinical course and outcome of children exposed to psychological trauma. The two most common trajectories were the Resilience and the Recovery types, together suggesting that over 90% of children were evidenced with a favorable 30-month outcome. The latent classes were associated with significant mean differences in depression and anxiety scores, supporting the clinical validity of the distinct trajectories.
BACKGROUND: We investigated the distinct longitudinal trajectories of posttraumatic stress symptoms in a sample of 167 children, who witnessed death of two mothers of their schoolmates. METHODS: The cohort was followed-up at 2 days (T1), 2 months (T2), 6 months (T3), and 30 months (T4) after the traumatic event. The children's posttraumatic stress symptoms (T1-T4), depression (T1, T3 and T4), state anxiety (T1, T3 and T4), and quality of life (T4) were assessed, along with parental stress related to child rearing (T4). Different trajectory patterns of the children's posttraumatic stress symptoms were identified using growth mixture modeling (GMM). RESULTS: Four different patterns of symptom change were identified, which were consistent with the prototypical model, and were named Recovery (19.9%), Resilience (72.7%), Chronic Dysfunction (1.8%), and Delayed Reactions (5.6%). Significant differences were found in depression and anxiety scores, children's quality of life, and parental rearing stress according to the distinct longitudinal trajectories of posttraumatic stress symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: The present study suggests that individual differences should be taken into account in the clinical course and outcome of children exposed to psychological trauma. The two most common trajectories were the Resilience and the Recovery types, together suggesting that over 90% of children were evidenced with a favorable 30-month outcome. The latent classes were associated with significant mean differences in depression and anxiety scores, supporting the clinical validity of the distinct trajectories.
Authors: Richard Meiser-Stedman; Anna McKinnon; Clare Dixon; Adrian Boyle; Patrick Smith; Tim Dalgleish Journal: Depress Anxiety Date: 2017-01-30 Impact factor: 6.505
Authors: Ji Min Cha; Ji Eun Kim; Min A Kim; Boyoung Shim; Myeong Jin Cha; Jung Jae Lee; Doug Hyun Han; Un Sun Chung Journal: J Korean Med Sci Date: 2018-05-30 Impact factor: 2.153
Authors: Joyce Zhang; Richard Meiser-Stedman; Bobby Jones; Patrick Smith; Tim Dalgleish; Adrian Boyle; Andrea Edwards; Devasena Subramanyam; Clare Dixon; Lysandra Sinclaire-Harding; Susanne Schweizer; Jill Newby; Anna McKinnon Journal: Eur J Psychotraumatol Date: 2022-02-28
Authors: James Shearer; Nestor Papanikolaou; Richard Meiser-Stedman; Anna McKinnon; Tim Dalgleish; Patrick Smith; Clare Dixon; Sarah Byford Journal: J Child Psychol Psychiatry Date: 2017-12-02 Impact factor: 8.982