Children under Siege: Pre-adolescence, PTSD, and Violent Conditions
Abstract
The paper analyzes the evolution of the diagnostic criteria for posttraumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) since its introduction in 1980 by reviewing its developmental consequences
for pre-adolescent children. Although the recently published DSM-5 offers a more developmentally
conscientious approach to children's responses following traumatic exposure, it needs
more structural consistency that better reflects current research on pre-adolescent
capacities to manage stress and child-specific expressions of distress. (1) The DSM-r
presents preschool PTSD as the only developmental subtype of the disorder despite
the fact that childhood development also differentiates traumatic expressions in older
children from adolescents and adults. (2) Many of the PTSD epidemiological data that
have been reanalyzed under the most recent typology only refer to adolescent and adult
samples although many researchers have demonstrated that developmental alterations
to DSM-IV and DSM-IV-TR criteria produce significantly higher prevalence rates in
children.
Type
Honors thesisDepartment
Psychology and NeurosciencePermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/8317Citation
Pits, Elisabeth (2014). Children under Siege: Pre-adolescence, PTSD, and Violent Conditions. Honors thesis, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/8317.Collections
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