Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences.
Department of Pediatrics.
Psychol Trauma. 2022 Oct;14(7):1099-1106. doi: 10.1037/tra0000543. Epub 2020 Jan 2.
Emotion dysregulation is a transdiagnostic risk factor for many mental health disorders and develops in the context of early trauma exposure. Research suggests intergenerational risk associated with trauma exposure and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), such that maternal trauma experiences and related symptoms can negatively impact child outcomes across development. The goals of the present study were to examine child and mother correlates of child PTSD symptoms and the unique roles of child and maternal emotion dysregulation in understanding child PTSD symptoms.
Subjects included 105 African American mother-child dyads from an urban hospital serving primarily low-income minority individuals.
Correlational results showed that child trauma exposure, child emotion dysregulation, maternal depressive symptoms, maternal emotion dysregulation, and potential for maternal child abuse all were significantly associated with child PTSD symptoms (s < 0.05). Hierarchical linear regression models revealed that child trauma exposure, maternal depression, and maternal abuse potential accounted for 29% of the variance in child PTSD symptoms ( < 0.001). Both child emotion dysregulation (² = 0.14, < .001) and maternal emotion dysregulation (² = 0.04, < .05) were significantly associated with child PTSD symptoms independent of other risk factors and potential for maternal abuse was no longer a significant predictor.
These results suggest that maternal emotion dysregulation may be an important factor in influencing their child's PTSD symptoms above and beyond child-specific variables. Both maternal and child emotion dysregulation could be valuable treatment targets for improving maternal mental health and parenting behaviors and bolstering child health outcomes, thus reducing intergenerational transmission of risk associated with trauma. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
情绪失调是许多心理健康障碍的跨诊断风险因素,并且是在早期创伤暴露的背景下发展起来的。研究表明,与创伤暴露和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)相关的代际风险,例如母亲的创伤经历和相关症状会对儿童在整个发育过程中的结果产生负面影响。本研究的目的是检查儿童和母亲与儿童 PTSD 症状的相关性,以及儿童和母亲情绪失调在理解儿童 PTSD 症状方面的独特作用。
研究对象包括来自一家服务于主要是低收入少数族裔人群的城市医院的 105 对非裔美国母子对。
相关分析结果表明,儿童创伤暴露、儿童情绪失调、母亲抑郁症状、母亲情绪失调以及母亲虐待儿童的可能性均与儿童 PTSD 症状显著相关(p<0.05)。分层线性回归模型显示,儿童创伤暴露、母亲抑郁和母亲虐待倾向解释了儿童 PTSD 症状的 29%(p<0.001)。儿童情绪失调(²=0.14,p<0.001)和母亲情绪失调(²=0.04,p<0.05)与儿童 PTSD 症状显著相关,独立于其他风险因素,而母亲虐待倾向不再是一个显著的预测因素。
这些结果表明,母亲的情绪失调可能是影响其子女 PTSD 症状的一个重要因素,超出了儿童特定变量的影响。母亲和儿童的情绪失调都可以作为改善母亲心理健康和养育行为以及增强儿童健康结果的有价值的治疗目标,从而减少与创伤相关的代际风险传递。