| Literature DB >> 35600532 |
Mathilde M Overbeek1,2, Nina Koren-Karie3, J Clasien de Schipper1,2, Ivanka van Delft1,2, Carlo Schuengel1,2.
Abstract
Children exposed to traumatic events are at increased risk for developing symptoms of a Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Children often discuss emotional, and therefore also traumatic, events in their lives with their parents, and the quality of these discussions can facilitate coping and further development. The study aim was 1) to explore whether the association between the quality of dialogue between mothers and children about emotional events and children's posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) might be indirectly linked through children's adaptive coping skills, and 2) whether this association differed when discussing different negative emotions. 169 mother-child dyads with interpersonal trauma-exposure (86% domestic violence, 14% mother and/or child sexually abused) participated in the Autobiographical Emotional Events Dialogue (AEED). Quality of mother-child emotion dialogue, captured in maternal sensitive guidance and child cooperation, and approach-oriented coping were coded from transcripts. PTSS was measured with the Child Behavior Checklist. Lower quality of mother-child emotion dialogue was associated with less approach-oriented coping and more symptoms of posttraumatic stress. There was an indirect effect of approach-oriented coping with angry feelings linking quality of mother-child emotion dialogue and child PTSS. Children's symptoms of posttraumatic stress were reflected in the quality of mother-child dialogues about traumatic and other emotional events. Findings support that dialogues about emotional events may be a promising target for intervention with children exposed to trauma.Entities:
Keywords: Coping; Emotion dialogue; Emotion socialization; Intrafamilial violence; Mother–child interaction; Parent–child communication; Sexual abuse; Trauma
Year: 2021 PMID: 35600532 PMCID: PMC9120269 DOI: 10.1007/s40653-021-00381-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Child Adolesc Trauma ISSN: 1936-1521
Fig. 1Visual depiction of the aims of the current study: explore an indirect effect of child adaptive coping (overall and with three different negative emotions independently) in the association between quality of mother–child emotion dialogue and child PTSD-symptoms
Correlations, means and standard deviations of studied variables
| Mean | 1 | 2 | 3 | 3.a | 3.b | 3.c | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quality of emotion dialogue | ||||||||
| 1. Maternal sensitive guidance | 42.27 | 7.03 | - | |||||
| 2. Child cooperation | 44.47 | 5.87 | .65*** | - | ||||
| 3. Approach-oriented coping (range 0–3) | 0.53 | 0.80 | .46*** | .48*** | - | |||
| a. Approach coping | 0.20 | 0.40 | .31*** | .27*** | .68*** | - | ||
| b. Approach coping | 0.18 | 0.38 | .35*** | .36*** | .68*** | 0.24** | - | |
| c. Approach coping | 0.15 | 0.36 | .24** | .33*** | .61*** | 0.12 | .23** | - |
| 4. Posttraumatic stress symptoms | 5.37 | 4.99 | −.06 | −.16* | −.11 | −.04 | −.22** | .01 |
Correlations with dichotomous variables (coping with individual emotions) were tested with Spearman’s Rho, correlations between the other variables with Pearson’s correlations
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01;***p < 0.001