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Acute stress disorder and the transition to posttraumatic stress disorder in children and adolescents: Prevalence, course, prognosis, diagnostic suitability, and risk markers.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Meiser-Stedman, Richard  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0262-623X
McKinnon, Anna 
Dixon, Clare 
Boyle, Adrian 
Smith, Patrick 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Early recovery from trauma exposure in youth is poorly understood. This prospective longitudinal study examined the early course of traumatic stress responses in recently trauma-exposed youth, evaluated the revised DSM-5 acute stress disorder (ASD) and PTSD diagnoses and alternative diagnoses, and identified risk factors for persistent traumatic stress. METHOD: Participants were 8- to 17-year-old emergency departments attendees exposed to single incident traumas. Structured clinical interviews were undertaken at 2 (n = 226) and 9 weeks (n = 208) posttrauma. RESULTS: Using the revised criteria in DSM-5, 14.2% met criteria for ASD at week 2 and 9.6% met criteria for PTSD at week 9. These prevalences were similar to the corresponding DSM-IV diagnoses (18.6% ASD at week 2; 8.7% PTSD at week 9). Using the same diagnostic criteria (DSM-IV or DSM-5) across assessments (i.e., "2-week PTSD") suggested that caseness declined in prevalence by approximately half. Overlap between DSM-IV and DSM-5 ASD and DSM-5 preschool child PTSD diagnoses was considerable. Two diagnoses were strongly predictive of corresponding week 9 diagnoses. Youth with ASD who subsequently had PTSD reported more negative alterations in cognition and mood at 2 weeks than those youth who did not develop PTSD. CONCLUSIONS: Youth exposed to single-event traumas experience considerable natural recovery in the first months posttrauma. Using DSM-5 criteria, ASD may not capture all clinically significant traumatic stress in the acute phase and is only moderately sensitive for later PTSD. Future research needs to address the role and etiology of negative alterations in cognition and mood symptoms.

Description

Keywords

PTSD/posttraumatic stress disorder, anxiety/anxiety disorders, child/adolescent, life events/stress, trauma, Adolescent, Child, England, Female, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Prevalence, Prognosis, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic, Stress Disorders, Traumatic, Acute

Journal Title

Depress Anxiety

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1091-4269
1520-6394

Volume Title

34

Publisher

Hindawi Limited
Sponsorship
MRC (unknown)
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_00005/4)