Sentences with phrase «earlier traumatic experiences»

Many of them need therapeutic support to help them overcome earlier traumatic experiences.
Some children are able to resolve early traumatic experiences and are able to obtain an «earned secure» attachment status in adulthood.
In other words, the therapist identifies and reframes distorted representations that developed in the relationship, based on early traumatic experiences.
An early traumatic experience can lead to long - lasting effects and children who live through it are at risk for developing PTSD.
This was explained as a result of the use of experiential techniques and the focus of therapeutic work on early traumatic experiences.
Many children have had early traumatic experiences.
However, to be effective, systems that work with these troubled families must identify the parent's trauma history and understand how their early traumatic experiences impair their ability to parent their own children successfully.
Accordingly, this study examined the associations between early traumatic experiences, negative automatic thoughts, and depression among young North Korean refugees living in South Korea.

Not exact matches

The rebound in consumer sentiment may have reflected the fact that the early experience with the GST was less traumatic than most had expected.
Thanks to the work of several dogged journalists, and despite the NFL's best efforts to subvert the truth, we now know that repeated blows to the head experienced in the normal course of football play can lead to chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a type of brain damage resulting in early onset dementia and severe (and, in the worst cases, suicidal) depression.
However, when we have these conversations early and prior to any crisis, it can remove much of the burden of an already traumatic experience.
Supports women experiencing symptoms of depression or anxiety after a traumatic birth experience, including early and late miscarriages, still birth, newborn illness, NICU, hospital transfer during planned homebirth, inadequate pain relief, unplanned medical intervention, birth plan not being honored, c - section, infant resuscitation, placental abruption, or general anesthesia during birth.
When I opened my private practice I was co-located in a midwifery office, the midwives I worked with attracted many women with history of traumatic birth seeking better care and I ended up taking on many clients with traumatic stress symptoms in a subsequent pregnancies and reporting experiences of obstetric violence and / or triggering memories and flashbacks from childhood or earlier life abuses.
There's prolonged, more intense pain postpartum, a longer hospital stay, readmission to the hospital, an upsetting or emotionally traumatic birth experience, less early contact and connection with the baby, depression and mental health problems, low self - esteem, relationship issues, difficulty functioning and doing usual daily activities postpartum, chronic pelvic pain from scar tissue, problems with and discontinuing breastfeeding - along with the associated risks to mom and baby of not breastfeeding.
When I finally had a chance to speak, we were already running over the 2 1/2 hours allotted for the roundtable, so I was only able to briefly touch on two of my many message points: one, that the game can be and is being made safer, and two, that, based on my experience following a high school football team in Oklahoma this past season - which will be the subject of a MomsTEAM documentary to be released in early 2013 called The Smartest Team - I saw the use of hit sensors in football helmets as offering an exciting technological «end around» the problem of chronic under - reporting of concussions that continues to plague the sport and remains a major impediment, in my view, to keeping kids safe (the reasons: if an athlete is allowed to keep playing with a concussion, studies show that their recovery is likely to take longer, and they are at increased risk of long - term problems (e.g. early dementia, depression, more rapid aging of the brain, and in rare cases, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, and in extremely rare instances, catastrophic injury or death.)
Continutation: I am thankful to have learned, practically and spiritually, from my traumatic early experiences.
Mind, I am not giving anyone health advice, just reporting my experience) I am thankful to have learned, practically and spiritually, from my traumatic early experiences.
At such an early developmental period, establishing sleep training too early may present a traumatic experience that is beyond baby's ability to comprehend.
But children can also develop sensory processing difficulties from sensory deprivation experienced early in life, especially those in the foster care system, those who've been adopted, and those who've experienced a traumatic early childhood such as in cases of overt abuse or neglect.
In addition to repeated flashbacks, patients respond with intense fear and hyperarousal, similar to that experienced during the original traumatic event, to the most inconsequential sensory stimuli that by themselves pose no threat, such as the bamboo mat in the case of the US soldier described earlier.
The study also raises the possibility that some people diagnosed with non-traumatic depression may actually have experienced a subclinical traumatic event at some point earlier in their lives that may have contributed to the development of depression, she noted.
Most traumatic childhood experiences occur well before the age of 13, and early intervention is key to preventing learning and behavioral problems during adolescence and adulthood.
The earlier in life that you can introduce your cat to the concept of getting wet, the more likely doing so will not be a traumatic experience.
Lack of early exposure to the sights, sounds or perhaps odors of a particular location, or one or more traumatic experiences associated with that location could lead to fear.
Genetics, early socialization or the lack of exposure during the critical period of social development, and traumatic experiences, shape how your dog interacts with other dogs.
In fact, an early, traumatic experience at a dog park could influence your puppy poorly for years to come.
A more constructive way of thinking is that the dog, being a dog, has a utterly different way of experiencing the world than you and is behaving in unacceptable ways due to genetics, early socialization (or the lack thereof), prior training (ditto), or traumatic events, otherwise known as single event learning.
Buck has described his artwork as having been a means to create an index by which he could make sense of earlier, often traumatic experiences that at the time he could not bear, symbolise or make legible so as to endure or transcend them.
Beck has described his work as a way to «create an index by which I could make sense of earlier, often traumatic experiences -LSB-...] so to transcend them.
Early in his career he gained significant courtroom experience assisting with two infant traumatic brain injury cases which settled for over $ 20 million.
Congruently, a mother with BPD's history of traumatic early experiences and a maladaptive attachment status results in behavioral patterns that are less supportive of child autonomy.
In 2010, more than 1 in 5 children were reported to be living in poverty.6, 10 Economic disadvantage is among the most potent risks for behavioral and emotional problems due to increased exposure to environmental, familial, and psychosocial risks.11 — 13 In families in which parents are in military service, parental deployment and return has been determined to be a risk factor for behavioral and emotional problems in children.14 Data from the 2003 National Survey of Children's Health demonstrated a strong linear relationship between increasing number of psychosocial risks and many poor health outcomes, including social - emotional health.15 The Adverse Childhood Experience Study surveyed 17000 adults about early traumatic and stressful experiences.
In the future, the ability to understand and contextualize the report of early adverse or traumatic experiences will fundamentally influence the approach to diagnosis and treatment of all psychiatric entities.1 This proposition is reminiscent to some extent of the longstanding distinction between the categorical and dimensional approaches to conceptualization.
Third, chronic stress associated with family violence may alter hypothalamic - pituitary axis functioning, lead to dysregulation of neuroendocrine systems controlling appetite, and influence hormonal regulation of visceral fat distribution.35 Other traumatic childhood experiences have been linked to altered serotonin and cortisol systems.70 Overlapping research has shown that bulimia is associated with decreased serotonin metabolites in cerebrospinal fluid,71 - 73 reduced platelet binding of serotonin reuptake inhibitors, 73 reduced density of paroxetine - binding sites, and altered cortisol function.70 Thus, early - life disruption of neuroendocrine systems may elevate risk for disordered eating behaviors and suboptimal fat storage and distribution.
We can have understanding for a war veteran who is terrorized at night, or avoidant of loud noises and other things that resemble their traumatic experiences; yet we somehow expect children, babies at heart, to connect, relate, trust, love, reciprocate relationship when their early life experience was marinated in trauma; being beaten for crying, left with tiny broken bones and head injuries, being used for adult sexual gratification, born drug addicted because of a mother drug use, having rarely been held in safe arms, having felt the pain of hunger over days, being left to cry until there are no more tears and no one to soothe.
This chapter focuses on the sequelae in adulthood of traumatic victimization experienced in early childhood (that is, infancy, toddlerhood, and early school years).
Children who have experienced chronic early maltreatment that results in Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder or reactive attachment disorder can be effectively treated with Dyadic Developmental Psychotherapy [2][3][4], which is an evidence - based family - based treatment approach.
This result was different from the findings reported in earlier studies that women are more likely to develop PTSD symptoms.6 17 19 This finding might be attributed to gender differences in responses to different traumatic events and in social networks.60 61 This phenomenon also might be attributable to the fact that the injuries sustained by the men after experiencing physical violence were more severe than those of the women.
Among them are a particular sensitivity to the role of traumatic or neglectful ties with early caregivers; the fundamental importance of affect regulation to successful therapy; the importance of establishing relationships with clients characterized by close, intense, emotional, and physical attunement; and the ultimate goal of recreating in therapy an attachment experience that makes up, at least to some degree, for what the client missed the first time around.
Complex Trauma in Children and Adolescents (2003) Alexander Cook, Margaret Blaustein, Joseph Spinnazola, and Bessel van der Kolk This White Paper explores the immediate and long - term consequences of a child's exposure to multiple traumatic experiences (as opposed to a single event), losses, and lack of consistent nurturance and responsive caregiving in early childhood.
«Few of the early childhood teachers had specific training or experience in responding to traumatic events and many struggled to address the emotions associated with the loss.»
Today we understand that factors related to adoption have the potential to significantly impact the mental health of adopted youth: pre-natal experiences including alcohol or drug exposure; lack of pre-natal care, birthmother stress or depression, as well as early life traumatic experiences including neglect and abuse.
Given their traumatic early childhood experiences, our kids haven't had full opportunities to experience simple joys in life.
Just like Dean and Dianna, many adoptive and foster parents learn that parenting children with traumatic early histories is very different than raising children with healthy early developmental experiences (to learn more about their story, please go here).
Like so many other famous writers, he describes his boarding school experience (especially the early part) as being downright terrible and possibly traumatic: He later said: «I wouldn't send a dog away to boarding school at age seven».
Her areas of special expertise include parent - child relations during the early childhood years, working with young children who have experienced traumatic events, and training and supervising early childhood social workers.
This study of 17,000 middle - aged, middle - class Americans showed that early traumatic life experience impacts hugely on later well - being, social function, health risks, disease burden, healthcare costs and life expectancy.
The questionnaire we used to measure the occurrence of early traumatic life events explored a variety of adverse experiences other than physical and sexual abuse.
In this study of a combined population of psychiatric outpatients and healthy volunteers (N = 235), we tested the hypothesis that MAOA genotype moderates the association between early traumatic life events (ETLE) experienced during the first 15 years of life and the display of physical aggression during adulthood, as assessed by the Aggression Questionnaire.
It is not uncommon for parents and family members to also have experienced trauma in their own early years, suffer from post traumatic stress disorder, and need their own therapeutic support in addition to intervention to repair the parent - child relationship.
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