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| Helping
Young Children Cope with Trauma

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Disasters are upsetting to
everyone involved. Children, older people, and/or people with disabilities
are especially at risk. For a child, his or her view of the world as a
safe and predictable place is temporarily lost. Children become afraid
that the event will happen again and that they or their family will be
injured or killed. The damage, injuries, and deaths that can result from
an unexpected or uncontrollable event are difficult for most children to
understand.
How a parent or other adult
reacts to a child following any traumatic event can help children recover
more quickly and more completely. This brochure contains general
information to help you in this task.
Children's Reactions
Children's fear and anxiety
are very real, even though to adults they may seem exaggerated. Children
are afraid of what is strange. They fear being left alone. Following a
disaster, they may begin acting younger than the age they are. Behaviors
that were common at an earlier age, such as bedwetting, thumb sucking,
clinging to parents or fear of strangers, may reappear. Older children who
have shown some independence may want to spend more time with their
families. Bedtime problems may appear. A child may begin to have
night-mares; not want to sleep alone; and/or become afraid of the dark,
falling asleep or remaining asleep.
Some children will show
their fear by developing physical symptoms, such as stomachaches,
headaches or feeling "sick." All children can experience
thinking difficulties. They can become easily distracted, feel confused
and disoriented and find it hard to concentrate. These reactions can be
triggered by smells, objects or activities associated with the trauma. A
child may be unaware of the triggers and of any of the behavioral changes
that occur. They are not intentionally showing they are anxious or
fearful.
Children of different ages react in different ways to
trauma.
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Birth
to 2 years: Without the ability to speak, children cannot
describe the event or their feelings. They can retain memories of
particular sights, sounds, or smells. When they are older, these
memories may emerge in their play. Babies may be more irritable, cry
more often and need to be held and cuddled frequently. They will
respond to the caring that is given to them by an adult. |
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Preschool
and Kindergarten: In
the face of an overwhelming event, very young children can feel
helpless, powerless, and unable to protect themselves. When the safety
of their world is threatened, they feel insecure and fearful. Children
this age cannot understand the concept of permanent loss. They believe
that consequences are reversible. They will repeatedly recreate parts
of the disaster in their play. These are all normal reactions.
Abandonment is a major childhood fear, so children need frequent
reassurance they will be cared for and will not be left behind. Activities
for home or school: play acting, physical contact, puppets, art,
stories, large muscle movement (throwing balls, etc.). |
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School
age (7 to 11 years) Children at this age have the
ability to understand the permanence of loss from a trauma. They can
become preoccupied with details of it and want to talk about it
continually. They may not be able to concentrate in school and their
grades drop. Since their thinking is more mature, their understanding
of the disaster is more complete. This can result in a wide range of
reactions: guilt, feelings of failure, and anger. |
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School age children
can also slip back into earlier behaviors. As in younger children,
sleep problems can appear. Their anxiety and fear may be seen in an
increased number of physical complaints. Activities for home or
school: play acting, puppets, drawing and painting, sharing
their experiences in groups, reading, creative writing or
discussion. |
Pre-adolescence
and adolescence (12 to 18 years):
In this age group, children have a great need to appear
knowledgeable and experienced to the world, especially to their family and
friends. When they live through a traumatic event they need to feel their
anxieties and fears are shared by their peers and are appropriate. Because
they survived the trauma, they may feel immortal. This can lead to
reckless behavior and taking dangerous risks. Their reactions are a
mixture of earlier age group reactions and reactions that are more adult.
Teenage years are a period of moving outward into the world. However,
experiencing a trauma can create a feeling that the world is unsafe. Even
teenagers may return to earlier ways of behaving. Overwhelmed by intense
reactions, teens may be unable to discuss them with their family members. Activities at school:
general classroom activities, literature or reading, peer helpers, health
class, art class, speech/drama, social studies/government, history.

How To Help Children
Routines:
Children of all ages can benefit from the family keeping their
usual routines—meals, activities, and bedtimes—as close to normal as
possible. This allows a child to feel more secure and in control. As much
as possible, children should stay with people with whom they feel most
familiar.
Special
Needs: Accept the special needs of children by allowing them
to be more dependent on you for a period of time. Give more hugs if they
need them; let them keep the light on at night or not sleep alone or
return to having their favorite teddy bear or blanket; don't mind their
clinging behavior.
Media
Coverage: Following a disaster, everyone is eager to hear the
latest news about what happened. However, disaster research has shown that
unexpected messages or images on television were frightening, causing a
reappearance of stress-related problems. In addition, anyone who watches
the disaster coverage can become what is called a "secondary
victim" and can suffer emotional and physical problems. It is best to
not allow children to watch news coverage of the disaster.
Feelings
and Reactions: Children express their feelings and reactions
in different ways. Your acceptance of this will make a difference to how
your child recovers from the trauma. This means accepting that some
children will react by becoming withdrawn and unable to talk about the
event, while others will feel intensely sad and angry at times and at
other times will act as if the disaster never happened. Children are often
confused about what has happened and about their feelings. However, don't
be surprised if some children don't seem to be affected by what they have
seen and heard. Not everyone has immediate reactions; some have delayed
reactions that show up days, weeks, or even months later, and some may
never have a reaction.
Talking
about what happened
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Listen
to and accept children's feelings. |
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Give
honest, simple, brief answers to their questions. |
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Make
sure they understand your answers and the meaning you intend. |
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Use
words or phrases that won't confuse a child or make the world more
frightening. |
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Create
opportunities for children to talk with each other about what happened
and how they are feeling. |
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Give
your child an honest explanation if you are feeling so upset you don't
want to talk about what happened. You may want to take "time
out" and ask a trusted family friend to help. |
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If
children keep asking the same question over and over again it is
because they are trying to understand; trying to make sense out of the
disruption and confusion in their world. Younger children will not
understand that death is permanent, so their repeated inquiries are
because they expect everything to return to normal. |
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If
the child feels guilty, ask him or her to explain what happened.
Listen carefully to whether he or she attaches a sense of
responsibility to some part of the description. Explain the facts of
the situation and emphasize that no one, least of all the child, could
have prevented it. |
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Let
the school help The child's teacher can be sensitive to changes in the
child's behavior and will be able to respond in a helpful way. |
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Even
if you feel the world is an unsafe place, you can reassure your child
by saying, "The event is over. Now we'll do everything possible
to stay safe, and together we can help get things back to
normal." |
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Notice
when children have questions and want to talk. |
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Be
especially loving and supportive; children need you at this time. |

When To Seek
Professional Help
Children are amazingly
flexible, even though they can be deeply affected by trauma or losses.
Sometimes a child can be helped by a counselor who can provide a safe
place to talk about what happened and their feelings. Getting professional
help is a good idea if a child shows any of the following changes for
longer than three months following the trauma:
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Behavior
or academic problems at school. |
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Angry
outbursts. |
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Withdrawal
from usual social activities or play with other children. |
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Frequent
nightmares or other sleep disturbances. |
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Physical
problems such as nausea, headaches, weight gain or loss. |
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Intense
anxiety or avoidance behavior that is triggered by reminders of the
event. |
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Depression
or a sense of hopelessness about life or the future. |
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Alcohol
or drug use problems. |
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Dangerous
risk-taking behavior. |
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Continued
worry about the event as a primary focus in life. |
Certain events may make a
child more vulnerable to having difficulty. If a child has experienced a
recent loss such as a divorce, a death of someone who was close, or a move
to a new neighborhood, he or she may feel particularly overwhelmed by the
trauma. A traumatic event can reactivate the emotions associated with
previous traumas, which can be overpowering.
Seeing a counselor does not
mean that a child is "mentally ill" or that you have failed to
support him or her. Following a trauma, many adults and children have
found that it is helpful to talk with a counselor who has specialized
training in post-traumatic reactions and can help them understand and deal
with how they are feeling.
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