Nottingham Hypnotherapy is for life
change.
Post traumatic stress Post traumatic
stress Post traumatic stress
Post traumatic stress
All children and adolescents experience stressful events which can affect them both
emotionally and physically. Their reactions to stress are usually brief, and they recover without further problems.
A child or adolescent who experiences a catastrophic event may develop ongoing difficulties known as posttraumatic
stress disorder (PTSD). The stressful or traumatic event involves a situation where someone’s life has been
threatened or severe injury has occurred (ex. they may be the victim or a witness of physical abuse, sexual abuse,
violence in the home or in the community, automobile accidents, natural disasters (such as flood, fire,
earthquakes), and being diagnosed with a life threatening illness). A child’s risk of developing PTSD is related to
the seriousness of the trauma, whether the trauma is repeated, the child’s proximity to the trauma, and his/her
relationship to the victim's.
Following the trauma, children may initially show agitated or confused behaviour. They
also may show intense fear, helplessness, anger, sadness, horror or denial. Children who experience repeated trauma
may develop a kind of emotional numbing to deaden or block the pain and trauma. This is called dissociation.
Children with PTSD avoid situations or places that remind them of the trauma. They may also become less responsive
emotionally, depressed, withdrawn, and more detached from their feelings.
|