In this discussion, we will address the possibilities of posttraumatic growth. As you know, most of the attention of researchers, health care providers, and parents is focused on the long term negative impacts of trauma and how to help the child resolve them. However, there is growing research interest in the long term growth that can derive from trauma – often alongside the negative impacts.
Child trauma researcher, Eva Alisic and her team have asked those of us in the trauma field to “look beyond posttraumatic stress disorder” in children, to consider also the posttraumatic growth (PTG) and the child’s quality of life after trauma (Alisic, van der Schoot, van Ginkel, & Kleber, 2008). Sadly, there is still little research to date that documents PTG in children.
Before posting to the discussion, please read the short discussion sections in the two studies below that asks children about their growth – one after a natural disaster and the other after a car accident:
Cryder, C. H., Kilmer, R. P., Tedeschi, R. G., & Calhoun, L. G. (2006). An exploratory study of posttraumatic growth in children following a natural disaster. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 76, 65–69.
Salter, E., & Stallard, P. (2004). Posttraumatic growth in child survivors of a road traffic accident. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 17, 335–340.
Then, read the article that considers posttraumatic growth – as well as the harm – that can influence our interventions with children:
Kilmer, R. P., Gil-Rivas, V., Griese, B., Hardy, S. J., Hafstad, G. S., & Alisic, E. (2014). Posttraumatic growth in children and youth: clinical implications of emerging research literature. The American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 84(5), 506–518.
After you have completed the readings, please post your responses to the
following x questions:
What were the strongest areas of growth that children reported? Which areas were surprising to you?
What additional questions might you have liked to ask the children in these studies? Explain your answer, please.
How do you think taking PTG into account can change a counselor’s interventions with a child and family?
How and when would you imagine raising the issue of PTG with a child and family to be respectful of their experience of crisis?
Reference
Alisic, E., van der Schoot, T. A. W., van Ginkel, J. R., & Kleber, R. J. (2008).Looking beyond posttraumatic stress disorder in children: Posttraumatic stress reactions, posttraumatic growth, and quality of life in a general population sample. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 29, 1455–1461
Discussion Participation Tips
Your initial post should be a reflective response that answers all questions, is adequately detailed, and cites outside sources when necessary to support your post. Typically, a post should be at least 250 words to allows you to answer and ask follow up questions, provide supplemental information, and to share views and experiences that draw us into an in-depth and meaningful conversation.
ANSWER
Post-Traumatic Growth in Children
Post-Traumatic growth refers to the process by which people gain a different perspective from a stressful event. Studies on PTG have mostly been focused on adults, but very few studies have been done on PTG in children. According to the studies, some of the strongest areas of growth reported by the children were the realization that they were not invincible and that they could die at any time (Salter & Stallard, 2004). This prompted most of them to see life differently and live a more fulfilling life attending to their dreams. Changing their goals and living a positive life. What surprised me was that the children started viewing death differently. Their prior knowledge of death changed from something that happens to old people to something that can happen to anybody at any time.
One of the questions I would have liked to ask the children is how they perceived death before the traumatic event happened. This question is important because it helps one understand a child’s change in perspective. It can also help one tell whether the child is experiencing PTG or PTSD. Raising PTG in family therapy is important because it will help the child recognize that some things about how they viewed life has changed. It will also help the family members realize that although the child is the same, some aspects of their lives have changed helped them change. PTG can impact children, especially their siblings and their friends (Levine & Kline, 2006). some children change their circle after a traumatic event has happened in their life (Kilmer et al., 2014). This is usually a response to the new growth they have experienced. PTG can be brought up in therapy while talking about the child’s trauma. This helps balance the negatives and the positives that happened as a result of the traumatic event.
References
Kilmer, R. P., Gil-Rivas, V., Griese, B., Hardy, S. J., Hafstad, G. S., & Alisic, E. (2014). Post-traumatic growth in children and youth: Clinical implications of an emerging research literature. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 84(5), 506–518. https://doi.org/10.1037/ort0000016
Levine, P. A., & Kline, M. (2006). Trauma through a child’s eyes: Awakening the ordinary miracle of healing. North Atlantic Books.
Salter, E., & Stallard, P. (2004). Post-traumatic growth in child survivors of a road traffic accident. Journal of Traumatic Stress: Official Publication of The International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, 17(4), 335-340.
Our Advantages
Plagiarism Free Papers
All our papers are original and written from scratch. We will email you a plagiarism report alongside your completed paper once done.
Free Revisions
All papers are submitted ahead of time. We do this to allow you time to point out any area you would need revision on, and help you for free.
Title-page
A title page preceeds all your paper content. Here, you put all your personal information and this we give out for free.
Bibliography
Without a reference/bibliography page, any academic paper is incomplete and doesnt qualify for grading. We also offer this for free.
Originality & Security
At Homework Sharks, we take confidentiality seriously and all your personal information is stored safely and do not share it with third parties for any reasons whatsoever. Our work is original and we send plagiarism reports alongside every paper.
24/7 Customer Support
Our agents are online 24/7. Feel free to contact us through email or talk to our live agents.
Try it now!
How it works?
Follow these simple steps to get your paper done
Place your order
Fill in the order form and provide all details of your assignment.
Proceed with the payment
Choose the payment system that suits you most.
Receive the final file
Once your paper is ready, we will email it to you.
Our Services
We work around the clock to see best customer experience.
Pricing
Our prces are pocket friendly and you can do partial payments. When that is not enough, we have a free enquiry service.
Communication
Admission help & Client-Writer Contact
When you need to elaborate something further to your writer, we provide that button.
Deadlines
Paper Submission
We take deadlines seriously and our papers are submitted ahead of time. We are happy to assist you in case of any adjustments needed.
Reviews
Customer Feedback
Your feedback, good or bad is of great concern to us and we take it very seriously. We are, therefore, constantly adjusting our policies to ensure best customer/writer experience.