## Abstract This study examines the relationship between the number of types of traumatic events experienced by children 3 to 6 years old, parenting stress, and children's posttraumatic stress (PTS). Parents and caregivers provided data for 154 urban children admitted into community‐based mental he
Responses to traumatic stress among community residents exposed to a train collision
✍ Scribed by Chung, Man Cheung ;Werrett, Julie ;Farmer, Steven ;Easthope, Yvette ;Chung, Catherine
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 122 KB
- Volume
- 16
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0748-8386
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
In 1996 in Stafford, UK, a collision occurred between a freight train and a post of®ce train. While only one person died, 21 employees working on the post of®ce train were injured. Instead of focusing on primary victims, i.e. those on the train, or secondary victims, i.e. helpers or the signi®cant others of the dead and injured, the present paper focused on community residents who lived on both sides of the embankment where the collision occurred. There were two aims to this paper. We wished to (1) describe the degree of traumatic stress of the community residents and (2) describe their traumatic responses at the time and during the aftermath of the collision. The hypothesis was that there was a signi®cant degree of traumatic stress among these residents and that the greater the impact of the collision they experienced, the more severe their traumatic stress became. Forty-nine residents participated in the study and were assessed using the Impact of Event Scale (IES), the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) and the Stafford train crash questionnaire. The results showed that among the whole sample, the residents experienced more intrusive thoughts than avoidance behaviour, but their scores were signi®cantly lower than those of the standardized stress clinic samples. Forty-one per-cent of the residents scored at or above the cutoff point of the GHQ. Two groups, high symptom and low/ medium symptom groups, were then divided, according to the cutoff of the IES, and compared. The results shows that the high symptom group scored signi®cantly higher in the sub-scales of the IES, and the GHQ. There was indeed a tendency that the greater the impact of the collision residents experienced, the more severe the distress was.
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