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News Maternal Ptsd Linked To Children's Trauma

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wicked child

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Maternal PTSD linked to children's trauma

The children of mothers with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) may be at high risk of being traumatized themselves, according to a small new study in urban U.S. neighborhoods.

Inner-city kids whose mothers had PTSD experienced more traumatic events - such as neighborhood shootings, domestic violence, dog bites or car accidents - before age five than kids whose mothers were depressed or had no mental health issues, researchers found.

Mothers with a combination of PTSD and depression were also more likely to report psychologically or physically abusing their child, compared to mothers with just one of those disorders.

"The main take-home message is that when parents are suffering, their children suffer, too," said Dr. Howard Dubowitz, professor of pediatrics at University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore.

"Those of us who are involved in helping to take care of kids can't ignore what problems mothers and fathers may be struggling with," added Dubowitz, who was not involved in the study.

Children exposed to trauma are themselves at greater risk of a mix of health challenges later on in life, such as obesity, drug and alcohol addictions, heart disease, suicide and mental health disorders, experts said.

"Everyone's been putting the focus on depression, even though PTSD and depression run together," said the study's lead author Claude Chemtob, director of NYU Langone Medical Center's family trauma research program.

He and his colleagues recruited 97 mothers with children between the ages three and five years old from Mount Sinai School of Medicine's pediatric primary care clinics in New York City to participate in the study.

Most mothers were from ethnic minority groups and had high school diplomas. The women all completed questionnaires designed to detect depression or PTSD symptoms. They also answered questions about violent events their children had witnessed.

The majority of mothers were not clinically depressed or suffering from PTSD, Chemtob's group reports in JAMA Pediatrics. Of the 97 mothers, 11 had diagnosable depression, six had PTSD and 10 had a combination of both.

Chemtob pointed out that the study population had slightly elevated levels of depression and PTSD diagnoses compared to national averages.

The researchers also found that mothers with PTSD and depression reported far greater parenting stress. "In short, their experience of parenting is that it is more difficult and less rewarding," Chemtob said.

Last year the American Academy of Pediatrics urged pediatricians to take steps to reduce childhood "toxic stress" that can occur when parents or caregivers suffer from poor mental health.

In the current study, the children of mothers with PTSD witnessed an average of five traumatic events.

Their peers whose mothers were only depressed or had no mood disorder experienced an average of only one traumatic event. A third group of kids with mothers suffering both PTSD and depression experienced nearly four events.

Previous research suggests that nearly half of women with PTSD may also suffer from depression.

"We know that the effects of maternal mental health difficulties can be especially problematic in early life, from pregnancy to age 5," Michelle Bosquet of Boston Children's Hospital in Massachusetts told Reuters Health in an email.

Bosquet, who was not involved in the new study, added that much previous research has focused only on depression and less is known about how PTSD may influence parenting.

Researchers noted that the study is limited by its small size.

"These results have been found among certain families," Dubowitz said. Future studies could look for the same results in different populations, such as whites, he said.

The authors encourage screening mothers for PTSD alongside depression in pediatric primary care settings. "This might be an effective way to intervene on child maltreatment," Chemtob told Reuters Health.

In his research on child abuse, Dubowitz has created a questionnaire for parents to complete before arriving for a pediatric appointment. It contains two questions to detect depressive symptoms.

"It may be most efficient to use just two questions to identify possible depression, and, in so doing, identify parents with that condition and … help them get evaluated," Dubowitz said.

"Aside from time, and time is very important, there is the whole challenge of changing health professionals' practice and behavior," he said.
 
This is interesting, raises lots of questions, and also raises mixed feelings. Screening for PTSD in primary care settings... I won't even go there.

What I find really interesting about this is that I am convinced my biological mother suffered from PTSD due to multiple traumas ranging from childhood incestuous sexual abuse to homelessness to abusive relationships, particularly the one she had with my biological father. (She was diagnosed BPD, but I am convinced this is a misdiagnosis due to the specific symptoms my siblings report her exhibiting and given the history of trauma)

The weird thing is that my biological siblings who were raised in an abusive environment do not seem to have PTSD, though they have all had mental health issues (they've mostly been diagnosed BPD and major depressive). I was raised elsewhere but suffered from sexual abuse and later other traumas.

Huh.
 
This sounds like jumping to conclusions that could do more harm than good.

Inner-city kids whose mothers had PTSD experienced more traumatic events - such as neighborhood shootings,

This is to do with where the people live and has nothing to do with PTSD. It may be that there are more cases of PTSD or depression in a poor neighborhood, but this isn't the way it is put across here.

Most mothers were from ethnic minority groups and had high school diplomas. The women all completed questionnaires designed to detect depression or PTSD symptoms.

I wonder if later when they talk about diagnoses, if they are referring to people who showed 'symptoms' from this questionnaire, rather than a proper diagnoses.

The majority of mothers were not clinically depressed or suffering from PTSD, Chemtob's group reports in JAMA Pediatrics. Of the 97 mothers, 11 had diagnosable depression, six had PTSD and 10 had a combination of both.

This is too small a group to conclude anything useful. More so as it seems there was little variation in culture or where the women live, there is no mention of whether they are single or in relationships, their economic status or any other factors that may effect results.

slightly elevated levels of depression and PTSD

Slightly in such a tiny amount of subjects studied could refer to one person.

Dubowitz has created a questionnaire for parents to complete before arriving for a pediatric appointment. It contains two questions to detect depressive symptoms.

I cannot imagine how depression can be screened in two questions.

"It may be most efficient to use just two questions to identify possible depression, and, in so doing, identify parents with that condition and … help them get evaluated," Dubowitz said.

I wonder who would pay for these people to get evaluated for depression, and who would pay for treatment that they then felt they needed. In a country where therapy is big business. It seems highly suspect.

There are just too many questions surrounding this. Can I ask where it was published?
 

Inner-city kids whose mothers had PTSD experienced more traumatic events - such as neighborhood shootings,

This is to do with where the people live and has nothing to do with PTSD. It may be that there are more cases of PTSD or depression in a poor neighborhood, but this isn't the way it is put across here.

I absolutely agree with you on this and many of your other points. You can have trauma and then be re-traumatized due to certain increases in vulnerability (abuse, for example, can attract other abusers later), but it's not like you can be born with a little marker on you that makes you a part of some kind of traumatic hive mind that follows you around, exposing you specially to traumatic experiences. That part really made zero sense.
 
This sounds a lot like "poor kids deal with more trauma." No duh.

I was thinking this study sounded a lot more like the frequency of people experiencing trauma depended on where they lived. Since kids live with their mom's (usually), of course they are going to be experiencing the same issues related to their living situations and will be likely to suffer from the same traumatic experiences as their mothers. They definitely need a bigger study to find anything conclusive.

That being said -

I have sooo many worries about whether my son has issues with anxiety/trauma! I left my abusive relationship when he was only five months old, because the ex had started showing signs that the abuse was going to extend to the baby. Protective instincts kicked in, and though he was only five months old, I frequently wonder if he was exposed to enough to cause him permanent emotional damage and worry if maybe I was too late.

He has never sufficiently learned to self-soothe, has nightmares, is afraid of loud noises, and more. He's getting a professional evaluation at his preschool that will hopefully help clear up my worries. But this makes me wonder too, if there is a connection between a mother's PTSD and a child's trauma, if maybe my son would be having issues with anxiety even if not related to his own trauma- because it would be related to mine. I'd be interested in seeing this study completed on a larger scale to find out if there really is a connection.
 
Well, I believe that some poor mothers shelter their children more.

I had to read a lot of childhood development books in order to understand how to treat my kids. I didn't see any healthy modeling.

I wonder how much it plays in that people who have PTSD often end up knowing predators and the predators just expand their scope.
 
I totally agree with almost all points made about the shortfallings except that it is to do with a disadvantaged area. The point was that families without PTSD from the same area had less trauma. It was such a small sample and the way they evaluated the information seems to have so many shortfalls though that it makes the results unreliable though.

If I understand correctly there were only 15 of the sample with PTSD.

They would need to use a much bigger sample and make sure they were screening for conditions properly before there could be a reliable result. And I do agree it should be taken from multiple areas.

I could see how PTSD could have two direct opposite effects. Parents who are hyper vigilant and highly protective of their children this keeping them safe or parents who are disconnected and not aware of all the things that could cause harm and thus not protective enough. That could happen if someone is too caught up in their own misery as well. A lot of us with PTSD also have a problem not falling into abusive relationships and don't seem to be able to get out of them easily. Its the whole abuse attracts abuse issue and I know I have done it.

Rightkindofme has a point too. It shocks to hear when people still allow their children to interact with someone who abused them but I can see why it happens.

Really any of us who have excused someones bad behaviour or concentrated on their "good" points could be guilty of causing our children to be exposed to trauma if there are children involved. Thank g*d I don't have any. :rolleyes:

I do see how that could very well up the amount of trauma the children end up exposed to.
 
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found them interesting.
Wicked child. I also think it is interesting and I do think it is quite possible that there could be a connection. So many of draw crisis and unsavoury characters around us unintentionally don't we? Sorry if you felt the arguments were aimed at you. Thanks for sharing.
 
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