Mt. Hope Family Center, University of Rochester, United States.
Mt. Hope Family Center, University of Rochester, United States.
Child Abuse Negl. 2018 Jun;80:301-311. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2018.04.005. Epub 2018 Apr 16.
Previous research has revealed a large prevalence of trauma experienced by children, creating high risk for the development of psychopathology. Research investigating the negative impacts of child maltreatment and other traumas has typically examined these experiences individually, controlling for co-occurring traumas, or has combined these experiences into a general variable of risk, thereby obscuring the complex relationships among environmental traumas and maltreatment. The current study expands on previous research by elucidating relationships between multiple contexts of overlapping traumas and maltreatment experienced by children, and by categorizing how these experiences join together to impact internalizing and externalizing symptomatology. Participants included 316 maltreated children and 269 nonmaltreated children (M age = 9.4, SD = 0.88) who attended a summer day camp research program for low-income children. Latent Class Analysis (LCA) identified three differential patterns of trauma exposure across children: 1) community violence and loss; 2) pervasive trauma; and 3) low trauma. Covariate analyses demonstrated that child maltreatment was significantly associated with class membership, suggesting that maltreated children were more likely to experience diverse traumas extending beyond their maltreatment experiences (pervasive trauma class). A two-way analysis of variance also demonstrated that trauma latent class membership and child maltreatment each represented unique predictors of internalizing and externalizing symptoms, with each having an independent effect on symptomatology. This investigation provides unique insight into the differential impact of patterns of trauma exposure and child maltreatment, providing support for further research and clinical practice addressing multiple levels of a child's ecology.
先前的研究揭示了儿童创伤经历的高发生率,这使他们面临发展为精神病理学的高风险。研究儿童虐待和其他创伤的负面影响的研究通常单独检查这些经历,控制共同发生的创伤,或者将这些经历合并为一个风险的一般变量,从而掩盖了环境创伤和虐待之间的复杂关系。本研究通过阐明儿童经历的多种重叠创伤和虐待的关系,并通过分类这些经历如何共同影响内化和外化症状,扩展了先前的研究。参与者包括 316 名受虐待儿童和 269 名非受虐待儿童(M 年龄=9.4,SD=0.88),他们参加了一个针对低收入儿童的暑期日间营地研究计划。潜在类别分析(LCA)确定了儿童创伤暴露的三种不同模式:1)社区暴力和丧失;2)普遍创伤;3)低创伤。协变量分析表明,儿童虐待与类别成员身份显著相关,这表明受虐待的儿童更有可能经历超越其虐待经历的多种创伤(普遍创伤类别)。方差分析还表明,创伤潜在类别成员身份和儿童虐待各自是内化和外化症状的独特预测因素,每个因素对症状都有独立的影响。这项调查提供了对创伤暴露和儿童虐待模式的不同影响的独特见解,为进一步研究和临床实践提供了支持,以解决儿童生态系统的多个层面。