2015
DOI: 10.1007/s10802-015-9985-y
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Negative Trauma Appraisals and PTSD Symptoms in Sri Lankan Adolescents

Abstract: The cognitive model posits that negative appraisals play an important role in posttraumatic stress disorder, in children as well as in adults. This study examined correlates of negative appraisals in relation to trauma exposure and their relationship to posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) in 414 Sri Lankan adolescents, aged 12 to 16, living in areas impacted in varying degrees by the 2004 tsunami. In 2008, participants completed measures of negative appraisals, lifetime traumatic events, posttraumatic stress … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…A large body of literature documents that children exposed to disasters are at risk for developing mental health symptoms (Dogan, 2011; Lai, Alisic, Lewis, & Ronan, 2016; Lai, La Greca, & Llabre, 2014). Posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) are the primary presenting mental health problem among children after disasters (Dyregrov & Yule, 2006; Furr, Comer, Edmunds, & Kendall, 2010; Lai, Kelley, Harrison, Thompson, & Self-Brown, 2015b; Ponnamperuma & Nicolson, 2016). More research is needed that addresses how to mitigate the mental health consequences of disasters for children.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A large body of literature documents that children exposed to disasters are at risk for developing mental health symptoms (Dogan, 2011; Lai, Alisic, Lewis, & Ronan, 2016; Lai, La Greca, & Llabre, 2014). Posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) are the primary presenting mental health problem among children after disasters (Dyregrov & Yule, 2006; Furr, Comer, Edmunds, & Kendall, 2010; Lai, Kelley, Harrison, Thompson, & Self-Brown, 2015b; Ponnamperuma & Nicolson, 2016). More research is needed that addresses how to mitigate the mental health consequences of disasters for children.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Similarly, information processing models of anxiety and traumatic stress apply this appraisal process to the development of PTSS, such that threatening appraisals of the traumatic event (in this case, injury) can lead to behavioral strategies (e.g., avoidance) that directly contribute to PTSS and/or prevent the development of longer-term realistic and adaptive appraisals (Ehlers & Clark, 2000; Meiser-Stedman, 2002). These models have been expanded from adults to children, with consideration of possible developmental changes in how children encode and resolve trauma memories (Dalgleish, Meiser-Stedman, & Smith, 2005; Meiser-Stedman 2002; Ponnamperuma and Nicolson, 2015; Salmon & Bryant 2002). For example, one investigation found global negative appraisals (i.e., how they experienced their worst events in the past month) to be the best predictor of PTSS in adolescents who experienced multiple traumas resulting from a tsunami, explaining 22% of the variance in concurrent PTSS (Ponnamperuma & Nicolson, 2015).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These models have been expanded from adults to children, with consideration of possible developmental changes in how children encode and resolve trauma memories (Dalgleish, Meiser-Stedman, & Smith, 2005; Meiser-Stedman 2002; Ponnamperuma and Nicolson, 2015; Salmon & Bryant 2002). For example, one investigation found global negative appraisals (i.e., how they experienced their worst events in the past month) to be the best predictor of PTSS in adolescents who experienced multiple traumas resulting from a tsunami, explaining 22% of the variance in concurrent PTSS (Ponnamperuma & Nicolson, 2015). Hitchcock and colleagues (2015) also identified a strong role for appraisals (i.e., disturbing and permanent change/ feelings of fragility/believing the world to be scary post-trauma exposure) of a single incident trauma and its consequences in predicting PTSS in youth: Appraisals mediated the relationship between social support and PTSS.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…This questionnaire has not been validated for use among the Sri Lankan adolescent population, but it has been translated to the local language and used by several previous studies, and has good psychometric properties (6,7). The items of this questionnaire are in keeping with the DSM-IV criterion 'A', 'B', 'C' and 'D', for the diagnosis of PTSD.…”
Section: Outcomes Of Interest and Measures Usedmentioning
confidence: 99%