THE ROLE OF COMPLEX POSTTRAUMATIC STRESS DISORDER AND PROTECTIVE FACTORS IN ACCEPTING-REJECTING DIMENSION OF PARENTING OF WOMEN SURVIVORS OF ABUSE
Author(s) -
Maja Misic,
Jelisaveta Todorović,
Andjelija Petrovic
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
annual of social work
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.157
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1848-7971
pISSN - 1846-5412
DOI - 10.3935/ljsr.v28i3.368
Subject(s) - psychology , moderation , clinical psychology , posttraumatic stress , neglect , psychological resilience , aggression , affection , childhood abuse , developmental psychology , child abuse , injury prevention , psychiatry , poison control , psychotherapist , social psychology , medicine , environmental health
The research intended to establish a connection between complex posttraumatic stress disorder (C-PTSD) and the accepting/rejecting parenting of mothers, survivors of complex trauma. The goal was also to examine how protective factors, resilience, and perceived social support moderate the effect of C-PTSD on the mother’s rejecting parenting, as well as how parental traumas and their parenting predicts parenting of women survivors. The study results are based on a survey completed by 100 women at the age 19 – 64. The sample had two groups: mothers with C-PTSD and a control group without C-PSTD. The results indicate that complex trauma can predict mother’s parenting rejection. C-PTSD displays correlations with all five dimensions of the negative parenting styles (lackof affection/neglect/aggression/control/undifferentiated rejection). Resilience acted as a moderator between C-PTSD and rejecting parenting. Parental traumas and their rejecting parenting manifest in women’s parentingKey words: C-PTSD, trauma exposure, women, parenting,resilience
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