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Polytraumatization and psychological symptoms in children and adolescents
Author(s) -
Per E. Gustafsson,
Doris Nilsson,
Carl Göran Svedin
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
european child and adolescent psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.796
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1435-165X
pISSN - 1018-8827
DOI - 10.1007/s00787-008-0728-2
Subject(s) - psychology , clinical psychology , population , child and adolescent psychiatry , interpersonal communication , checklist , incidence (geometry) , operationalization , psychiatry , medicine , social psychology , philosophy , physics , environmental health , epistemology , optics , cognitive psychology
Previous research on the impact of traumatic experiences in children and adolescents has focused almost entirely on the effect of single trauma. Research on cumulative traumas has been lacking, but Finkelhor (Child Abuse Negl 31:7-26, 2007) has recently directed the attention to the concept of polyvictimization. As an extension of this concept, this study examined the impact of polytraumatization, operationalized as the number of different potentially traumatic events. The study population comprised two cross-sectional samples of school-aged children (n = 270) and adolescents (n = 400). Information of life-time incidence of traumatic events was collected by the life incidence of traumatic events (LITE), and psychological symptoms by the parent version of the strengths and difficulties questionnaire (SDQ) for the school children and the self-report trauma symptom checklist for children (TSCC) for the adolescents. We found that exposure to at least one traumatic event was common in both the samples (63% of the children and 89.5% of the adolescents). The number of different traumatic events, polytraumatization, was highly predictive of symptoms in both samples, and with a few exceptions surpassed the impact of specific events in exploratory analyses. We furthermore replicated previous findings of the important impact of interpersonal over non-interpersonal events on symptoms in both samples, and found an indication that this effect differed by gender in different manners in the two samples. This study emphasizes the significance of both the quantity of traumatic events, polytraumatization, as well as the quality, interpersonal events.

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