Experiential Avoidance and the Relationship between Child Maltreatment and PTSD Symptoms: Preliminary Evidence
Date
2012
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Child abuse & neglect
Abstract
Objective: Not every adolescent exposed to child maltreatment develops symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), emphasizing the need to identify variables that explain how some maltreated children come to develop these symptoms. This study tested whether a set of variables, respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) and cortisol reactivity as well as experiential avoidance, explained the relationship between child maltreatment and PTSD symptoms. Methods: Adolescent females (N = 110; n = 51 maltreated) 14-19 years of age completed interviews, questionnaires, and a stressor paradigm. A multiple mediator model was used to assess the effect for the set of variables while identifying specific indirect effects for each variable. Results: Results indicated that the set of variables mediated the relationship between child maltreatment and PTSD symptoms. However, only experiential avoidance contributed significantly to this effect when simultaneously estimating all other variables. The indirect effect for experiential avoidance was also significantly stronger than the effects of RSA and cortisol reactivity. Conclusions: Data support the examination of experiential avoidance in understanding how adolescents who have been maltreated develop PTSD symptoms with implications for prevention and intervention. (Author Abstract)
Description
item.page.type
Article
item.page.format
Keywords
child abuse, experiential avoidance, PTSD, resiliency, research, treatment
Citation
Shenk, C. E., Putnam, F. W., & Noll, J. G. (2012). Experiential avoidance and the relationship between child maltreatment and PTSD symptoms: Preliminary evidence. Child abuse & neglect, 36(2), 118-126.