2000
DOI: 10.1002/1099-1298(200011/12)10:6<475::aid-casp578>3.0.co;2-f
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Life-events and post-traumatic stress in a sample of English adolescents

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Cited by 106 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…The current study had notable strengths, including that the main study included a large, school‐based sample of youths in the United Kingdom, which makes the findings regarding prevalence of trauma exposure, safety‐seeking behaviors, and PTSD more reliable and generalizable. The trauma prevalence was in line with a previous sample of youths in the United Kingdom that found 84% of adolescents had experienced negative life events (Joseph, Mynard, & Mayall, ). The low opt‐out rates in the current study also means the sample should have been relatively unbiased in terms of high or low rates of trauma exposure and psychopathology.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The current study had notable strengths, including that the main study included a large, school‐based sample of youths in the United Kingdom, which makes the findings regarding prevalence of trauma exposure, safety‐seeking behaviors, and PTSD more reliable and generalizable. The trauma prevalence was in line with a previous sample of youths in the United Kingdom that found 84% of adolescents had experienced negative life events (Joseph, Mynard, & Mayall, ). The low opt‐out rates in the current study also means the sample should have been relatively unbiased in terms of high or low rates of trauma exposure and psychopathology.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…But even in showing that a substantial percentage of young people report difficulties it is not certain that these can actually be attributed to caring. Illness and injury in the family are often stressful experiences for young people regardless of their caring role (Joseph et al 2000). Other studies have tested for statistical association between the extent of caring and problems.…”
Section: Prevalence and Effects Of Caringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a longitudinal study of 384 US adolescents aged 18, Giaconia and colleagues [9] found that 43% of the total sample had experienced at least one DSM-III-R trauma, and that 6.3% met the criteria for PTSD. Joseph, Mynard & Mayhall [10] focused on less severe and more common negative life events, and in a community based study of 427 English adolescents (11 -16 years) they found that 84% had experienced at least one negative life event. Costello and colleagues [11] also studied a broad range of potentially traumatic events in a general population study among 1420 children and adolescents (aged 9 -16) in North Carolina.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%