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(English)In: Article in journal (Refereed) Submitted
Abstract [en]
Background: Children under the age of six are disproportionately exposed to traumatic experiences and seem especially vulnerable. Trauma often affects both children and caregivers and their relationships. Trauma-focused treatment and its long-term effects for young children are of prime interest, but research is limited and lacks follow-up data.
Objective: The current study explored the long-term effects of Child-Parent Psychotherapy (CPP) treatment and potential predictors of outcome.
Participants and setting: The sample included 37 traumatized young children, aged 2-6 years, who had received the dyadic treatment together with their caregiver in a multi-site clinical setting. The majority had been exposed to several potential traumatic events, including interpersonal trauma.
Methods: The study was a naturalistic one-group, post-design study with a 6-month follow-up. Outcome measures comprised child and caregiver post-traumatic stress symptoms and signs of caregiving disorganization reported by caregivers. Piecewise Linear Mixed Models were applied to explore long-term treatment effects. Within-group effect sizes were calculated using model-estimated differences in mean values. Possible predictors of outcome were analyzed by adding them as covariates in the model and interacting them with time.
Results: The outcomes were stable six months after treatment. Positive effects were reduced child and caregiver post-traumatic stress symptoms (d = 0.62; d = 0.57, respectively) and signs of caregiving disorganization (d = 0.64). A higher degree of child trauma symptoms predicted less reduction in caregiver traumatic stress.
Conclusions: The results indicate that children, caregivers, and their relationship benefit from CPP and that results are sustainable. The naturalistic design strengthens the applicability of CPP.
Keywords: Childhood trauma, Child-Parent Psychotherapy, attachment-based therapy, post-traumatic stress, long-term effects, predictors
Keywords
Childhood trauma, Child-Parent Psychotherapy, attachment-based therapy, posttraumatic stress, long-term effects, predictors
National Category
Psychology
Research subject
Psychology
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:kau:diva-103717 (URN)
Funder
Swedish National Board of Health and WelfareClas Groschinski Memorial Foundation
2025-03-262025-03-262025-03-27