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News Maternal Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Associated With Increased Risk For Child Maltreatment

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MyPTSD

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Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in mothers appears to be associated with an increased risk for child maltreatment beyond that associated with maternal depression, according to a new study.

[DLMURL="http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/mind_brain/ptsd/~3/Dn_s-Ian6go/130902181005.htm"]Continue reading...[/DLMURL]
 
The children of mothers with PTSD (mean number of events the child was exposed to, 5) or with comorbid PTSD and depression (3.5 events) experienced more traumatic events than those of mothers with depression (1.2 events) or neither disorder (1.4 events).
Very interesting... though probably something that is quite known IMO. Those with PTSD raising children are more likely to abuse their children, whether emotionally, physically or verbally, the chances are much higher if the mother is susceptible to being highly stressed and thus reactive as a result.

Good to see them putting it out there. I think many see it where the mother is stay at home, the father is at work in a highly stressed job, that stress comes home and the father can often fit an abusive model.
 
Those with PTSD raising children are more likely to abuse their children, whether emotionally, physically or verbally, the chances are much higher if the mother is susceptible to being highly stressed and thus reactive as a result. Good to see them putting it out there. I think many see it where the mother is stay at home, the father is at work in a highly stressed job, that stress comes home and the father can often fit an abusive model.

Shit.

Someone clip me around the ears if they hear me say or do anything concerning?
 
I think the problem is that stay at home moms are isolated, and due to all the work of raising a baby/babies, there's not much time for friends or adult interaction. Im a supporter (no PTSD) and I was mind numbingly miserable and isolated. Face it, most people don't really want to hang out with a worn out, sleep deprived, tired messy mom and her sometimes screaming, sometimes smelly baby/babies. Here in the USA, anyway, our society isnt really supportive of moms in general. I would say thats different in Latin American countries, or maybe parts of Europe.
 
I've found this all true and that good mothering is a hell of a lot of work, and that my best was not good enough for me, and I needed help to meet my standards. Highly stressed and reactive and all that fits to a t. It's a harsh reality but important to be aware of, because we can do very well if we're self-aware, have support, and work on our issues, just like anyone else.
 
I imagine what makes it worse is the mother also or alternatively being caught up in repeated victim behaviour and ending up in abusive relationships - and the children therefore being exposed to more trauma. Either by seeing the mother being abused or by themselves being abused by the partner.

Sad.
 
This scares me to be honest. I don't want to turn out to be like my own parents were to me.
I haven't read this article yet, but will do later, but just wanted to say to you that 'abused' does not have to equal 'abuser'. It doesn't have to be a self fulfilling prophecy in that way.

I am far from being a perfect parent, actually I would find it more worrying if someone thought they were, but I am a good parent. And coming from me that's quite a thing to say, because there are very few things I identify as being good about myself.

In some ways I think I am a better parent for my own past, because it has made me more aware of and conscious of my own parenting and the consequences of it.
 
I agree, there is actually blessing and bane in coming from an abusive background: I learned the hard way what *not* to do as a good parent, and was motivated to get into therapy early, and build a huge array of skills that helped me succeed in ways that might even be harder for people who hadn't done that work. I find it's just a matter of feeling out my blind spots: it's hard to anticipate all of a little child's needs and the best reactions to them in the absence of consistently good parenting.
 
This the interesting thing about journalism. Here is a different article on the same lot of research. Link Removed

And here is the actual research. https://archpedi.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=1734463&resultClick=1

It's valuable regardless of course and I am not discounting it at all but it seems to me it will unfortunately be misquoted and could be used to perpetuate the generalisations about those with PTSD being abusive or violent where some people start thinking that every single one of those with PTSD is. As is sometimes evident on the anonymous forum.
 
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Here is the other article on it:

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 97mothers, 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."


So note that it was a sample from a disadvantaged area. That they specifically mention children witnessing traumatic event rather than being directly abused and that the means of assessing if they had PTSD and depression was very basic. All the data about those with PTSD also came from a sample group of just 17.
 
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