Coping and Post-Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents after an Acute Onset Disaster: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
2.1. Search Strategies
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Articles Included
2.4. Data Extraction and Quality Appraisal
3. Results
3.1. PTSD Measures
3.2. Coping Measures
3.3. Relationship between Coping Style and PTSD Symptoms
4. Discussion
4.1. Coping Measurement
4.2. Self-Report Measurement
4.3. Coping and PTSD
4.4. Limitations and Directions for Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Author | Event 1 | Time Frame | Age/ Grade | n | Race/ Ethnicity | Country | PTSD Measure | Coping Measure | Exposure Measure | Summary of PTSD and Coping Styles 2 | QS 3 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Natural Disaster | |||||||||||
Martin, Felton & Cole [28] | F | Longitudinal 6-months pre flood 10-days post flood | 10–15 years old | 127 | 87% White 5% Latinx 3% Black 0.5% Asian American 6% Multiracial/ other | United States | The Child PTSD Symptom Scale (CPSS) | Rumination Response Scale (RRS) | Flood events questionnaire | Rumination (+) | Moderate |
An, Fu, Wu, Lin, & Zhang [14] | EQ | Longitudinal 1-year, 1.5-years, 2-years post-EQ | 13–16 years old | 636 | 52% Quiang 26% Tibetan 18% Han 6% other | China | Child PTSD Symptom Scale (CPSS) | Coping Style Scale | N/A | Avoidant (+) | Moderate |
Fan, Long, Zhou, Zheng, & Liu, [29] | EQ | Longitudinal 6, 12, 18, 24-months post-EQ | 7th and 10th grade | 1573 | No ethnicity information included | China | Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Self-Rating Scale (PTSD-SS), | Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire (SCSQ) | 4-item earthquake exposure measure | Negative (+) Positive (-) | Moderate |
Chen, Wang, Zhang & Shi [30] | EQ | Cross-sectional 6-months post-EQ | 4–8th grade | 156 | No ethnicity information included | China | Children’s Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES-13) | Coping Strategy Scale | 7-item earthquake exposure measure | Emotion-focused (+) | Moderate |
Du, Ma, Ou, Ye, Ren, & Li [31] | EQ | Cross-sectional 8-years post EQ | 14–20 years | 4118 | 99% Han 1% other | China | PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version (PCL-C) | Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire (SCSQ) | 4-item earthquake exposure measure | Negative (+) Positive (-) | Moderate |
Xiao, Liu, Liu, Jiang [32] | EQ | Cross-sectional 3-years post-EQ | 11–18 years old | 867 | 100% Tibetan | China | PTSD Checklist–Civilian Version. (PCL-C) | Coping Styles Scale | 13-item earthquake exposure measure | Negative (+) | Moderate |
Stratta et al. [33] | EQ | Cross-sectional 2-years post-EQ | 17–18 years old | 371 | Not specified | Italy | Trauma and Loss Spectrum (TALS) Self Report | Brief Cope | N/A | Self-distraction (+) Venting (+) Denial (+) Behavioral Disengagement (+) Humor (-) Emotional support (+) | Fair |
La Greca, Lai, Llabre, Silverman, Vernberg, & Prinstein [15] | H | Longitudinal 3, 7, 10-months post hurricane | 3–5th grade | 568 | 44% White 26% Latinx 22% Black 8% other | United States | PTSD Reaction Index for Children (PTSD-RI) | Kidcope 15-items | Life Events Schedule | Blame and anger (+) | Moderate |
Prinstein, La Greca, Vernberg, Silverman [34] | H | Cross-sectional 7-months post hurricane | 3–5th grade | 506 | 47% White 27% Latinx 23% Black 3% Asian American | United States | PTSD Reaction Index for Children (PTSD-RI) | -Children’s Coping Assistance Checklist -KidCope 15-items | N/A | Emotional processing (+) Distraction coping assistance (+) | Moderate |
Pina, Villalta, Ortiz, Gottschall, Costa and Weems [18] | H | Longitudinal 12-months pre-hurricane 6-7 months post hurricane | 7–16 years old | 46 | 67% White 33% Black | United States | The Child PTSD Checklist | Children’s Coping Strategies Checklist | 13-item hurricane related experiences measure | Avoidant (+) | Fair |
Kilmer, & Gil-Rivas [12] | H | Longitudinal 1- and 2-years post hurricane | 7–10 years old | 51 | 77% Black 15% White 8% other | United States | UCLA PTSD Reaction Index | -Coping Competency Beliefs -Rumination Scale for children | Hurricane-Related Exposure scale | Intrusive and deliberate rumination (+) | Moderate |
Russoniello et al. [35] | H | Cross-sectional 6-months post hurricane | 4th grade | 150 | 63% Black 33% White 4% Latinx | United States | PTSD Reaction Index for Children (PTSD-RI) | Kidcope 15-items | 1-item Assessing home flooding | Social withdrawal (+) Self-criticism (+) Blaming others (+) Problem solving (+) | Fair |
Terranova [36] | H | Longitudinal 1–1.5 months and 2–8 months post hurricane | 6th grade | 175 | 61% White 18% Black 17% Multiple ethnicity 4% Native American/ Latinx | United States | The Child PTSD Checklist | -Self-Report Coping Measure (SRCM) -How I Coped Under Pressure Scale (HICUPS) | 6-item hurricane exposure measure | Negative (+) | Moderate |
Papadatou GiannopoulouBitsakou, Bellali, Talias, & Tselepi [17] | WF | Cross-sectional 6 months post wildfire | 12–17 years | 1468 | 93% Greek 6% immigrant | Greece | Children’s Revised Impact of Event Scale (CRIES) | Kidcope 11-items | Wildfire Experience Questionnaire | Escape- oriented (+) | High |
Lewis Langley & Jones [37] | WF | Longitudinal 3- and 10-months post WF | 14–16 years old | 206 | 68% White 32% Black | United States | PTSD Reaction Index for Adolescents (PTSD-RI) | Child Coping Efficacy Scale | Fire-Related Traumatic Experiences | Coping efficacy (-) | Moderate |
Lack & Sullivan [38] | T | Cross sectional 13-months post tornado | 3–6th grade | 102 | 90.9% White 5.5% Native American | United States | PTSD Reaction Index (PTSD-RI) | Kid Cope 15-item | Tornado exposure questionnaire | Number of coping strategies (+) | Fair |
Manmade Disaster | |||||||||||
Lengua, Long, & Meltzoff, [39] | TA | Longitudinal 2–9 weeks post-9/11 terrorist attack; 6-months before 9/11 terrorist attack | 9–13 years old | 143 | 66% White 19% Black 6% Multiple ethnicity 4% Latinx 3% Asian American 2% Native American | United States | Child PTSD Symptom Scale (CPSS) | Children’s Coping Strategies Checklist | 2-items assessing direct and indirect exposure to terrorist attacks | Avoidant (+) | High |
Multiple Disasters | |||||||||||
Fernando & Berger [40] | TS | Cross-sectional (timeframe post TS not reported) | 6–13th grade | 669 | 77% Sri Lankan 23% Tamil 48% Buddhist 28% Muslim 15% Hindu 8% Christian | Sri Lanka | Child Post-traumatic Stress Scale (CPSS) | Kidcope Religious Coping Index | War- and Tsunami-Related Stressor Scale | Avoidant (+) | Moderate |
Coping Scale | Validated Populations | Response Style | Author | Positive, Active, Approach Coping Mechanisms (Internal Consistency) | Negative, Passive, Avoidant, Emotion-Focused (Internal Consistency) | Association between Coping and PTSD (Effect Size) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Simplified Coping Style Questionnaire | Chinese university students: normative population [41] | Self-report | Fan et al. [29] | Positive ɑ = 0.76 | Negative ɑ = 0.65 | Odds of PTSD at any wave (Fan et al.): -Medium vs. low negative coping: OR = 1.89 -High vs. low negative coping: OR = 1.73 -High vs. low positive coping: OR = 0.63 |
Du et al. [31] | Active ɑ = 0.80 | Passive ɑ = 0.73 | N/A | |||
Self-report coping measure | United States 4-6th grade students: normative population [42] | Self-report | Terranova [36] | N/A | Negative -Internalized (inwardly managing emotional stress reactions) ɑ = 0.78 -Externalized (venting negative emotions) ɑ = 0.74 | Negative coping Time 1: r = 0.47 Time 2: r = 0.29 |
Rumination Response Scale (RRS) | United States adults with depressive disorders [43] | Self-report | Martin Felton and Cole [28] | N/A | Rumination Wave 1 ɑ = 0.81 Wave 2 ɑ = 0.91 | Rumination: Wave 2 r = 0.35 |
Rumination Scale for Children | Psychometric testing not conducted | Self-report | Kilmer and Gil-Rivas [12] | N/A | Rumination deliberate rumination ɑ = 0.65 Intrusive rumination ɑ = 0.33 | Rumination: r = 0.28 |
Coping Strategy Scale | Chinese middle school children and adolescents: normative population [44] | Self-report | Chen, Wang Zhang, & Shi [30] | Problem Focused (problem solving, social support, positive cognitive restructuring) ɑ = 0.85 | Emotion Focused (forbearance, escape, emotional expression, wishful thinking) ɑ = 0.80 | Intrusion Problem Focused -Problem-solving: r = 0.09 -Social support: r = 0.01 -Positive cognitive restructuring: r = 0.04 Emotion Focused -Forbearance: r = 0.32 -Escape: r = 0.23 -Emotional expression: r = 0.23 -Wishful thinking: r = 0.22 Avoidance Problem-Focused -Problem-solving: r = 0.20 -Social support: r = 0.04 -Positive cognitive restructuring: r = 0.06 Emotion-Focused -Forbearance: r = 0.16 -Escape: r = 0.04 -Emotional expression: r = 0.01 -Wishful thinking: r = 0.08 |
Children’s Coping Strategies Checklist | United States 4-6th grade children: normative population [45] | Researcher administered interview | Lengua, Long, & Meltzof [39] | Active (assessing cognitive decision making, control, direct problem solving, positive cognitive restructuring, optimism, seeking understanding) ɑ = 0.90 | Avoidant (assessing cognitive avoidance, avoidant actions) ɑ = 0.82 | Active: r = 0.10 Avoidant: r = 0.26 |
Pina et al. [18] | ɑ = 0.87 | ɑ = 0.68 | Active: r = 0.55 Avoidant: r = 0.58 | |||
How I coped under pressure | United States 9–13 year-old children and adolescents: normative population [46] | Self-report | Terranova [36] | N/A | Negative (avoiding situations where stressor may occur) ɑ = 0.79 | Negative coping: r = 0.47 |
Coping Style Scale | Chinese middle school students [47] | Self-report | Xiao, Liu, Liu, Jian [32] | Positive (problem solving, resorting) total α = 0.88 combined positive and negative | Negative (withdrawal, abreacting, imagining, tolerating) total α = 0.88 combined positive and negative | Positive coping: OR = 0.63 Negative coping: OR = 2.85 |
An et al. [14] | N/A | Avoidant (not specified) Time 1 α = 0.77 Time 2 α = 0.83 Time 3 α = 0.85 | Avoidant Time 1: r = 0.24 Time 2: r = 0.24 Time 3: r = 0.28 | |||
Kidcope 10-items | United States 10–18-year-old children and adolescents Setting: normative population and chronic illness [48] | Self-report | Fernando and Berger [40] | Approach (problem-solving and positive cognitive restructuring) α = not reported | Avoidant (distraction, blaming, wishful thinking, and resignation) α = not reported | Approach: r = 0.11 Avoidant: r = 0.16 |
Kidcope 11-items | Hong Kong Adolescents normative sample [49] Greek Adolescents wildfire affected sample [17] | Self-report | Papadatou et al. [17] | Control Oriented (cognitive restructuring, problem solving, social support, emotional relaxation) ɑ = 0.64 | Escape Oriented (distraction, social withdrawal, self-criticism, blaming others, resignation, emotional outbursts) ɑ = 0.64 | Control-oriented: Incident risk ratio (IRR) = 1.09 Escape-oriented: IRR = 1.14 |
Kidcope 15-items | United States 3rd–5th grade hurricane affected children [50] | Self-report | La Greca et al. [15] | N/A | Blame and Anger (blame self, blame others, yell, scream, get mad) ɑ = not reported | Odds of blame and anger coping with membership in: -Recovering trajectory of PTSD vs. resilient trajectory: OR = 5.77 -Chronic trajectory of PTSD vs. resilient trajectory: OR = 7.79 -Chronic PTSD trajectory vs. recovering trajectory: OR = 1.35 |
Prinstein et al. [34] | Positive (problem solving, distraction, cognitive restructuring, social support, adaptive emotional regulation) ɑ = 0.77 Distraction ɑ = not reported | Resignation ɑ = not reported | N/A | |||
Russionello et al. [35] | Not designated-used individual items ɑ = 0.09–0.41 | Distraction r = 0.02 Social Withdrawal r = 0.25 Cognitive Restructuring r = 0.07 Self-criticism r = 0.26 Blaming others r = 0.20 Problem solving r = 0.24 Emotional Regulation r = 0.40 Wishful Thinking r = −0.01 Social Support r = 0.04 Resignation r = 0.12 | ||||
Lack & Sullivan [38] | Combined all coping items into one composite measure ɑ = not reported | Total score r = 0.44 | ||||
Children’s Coping Assistance Checklist | United States 3-5th grade after hurricane Andrew [34] | Self-report | Prinstein et al, [34] | Roles and Routines α = 0.78 | Emotional processing ɑ = 0.74 Distraction α = 0.84 | Emotional processing: d = 0.49 Roles and routines: d = −0.40 Distraction: d = 0.78 |
Brief Cope | United States adults after hurricane Andrew [51] | Self-Report | Stratta et al. [33] | Positive (planning, positive reframing, active, acceptance) α = N/A | Emotional (venting, self-blame, instrumental, support, emotional support) α = N/A Disengagement (humor, substance abuse, behavioral disengagement, denial, religion) α = N/A | Re-experiencing Emotional: Venting r = 0.30; Instrumental support r = 0.15; Use of emotional support = 0.22 Disengagement: Denial r = 0.31; Religion r = 0.07; Behavioral disengagement = r = 0.14 Positive: Humor = −0.09 Not categorized: Self-distraction r = 0.21 Avoidance Emotional: Venting r = 0.29 Disengagement: Denial r = 0.26; Use of emotional support r = 0.12 Not categorized Self-distraction r = 0.17 Arousal Emotional: Use of emotional support r = 0.12 Disengagement: Venting r = 0.31; Denial r = 0.26 Not categorized: Self-distraction r = 0.23 |
Child Coping Efficacy | United States 9-12 year-old children who experienced divorce [52] | Self-report | Lewis, Langley and Jones [37] | Coping Efficacy Black adolescents: ɑ = 0.86 White adolescents: ɑ = 0.85 | N/A | Coping efficacy Black adolescents: r = −0.42 White adolescents: r = −0.47 |
Coping Competency Beliefs | United States 9–12-year-old children who experienced divorce [53] | Self-report | Kilmer & Gil-Rivas [12] | Coping Competency ɑ = 0.63 | N/A | Coping competency Time 1: r = 0.11 Time 2: r = −0.20 |
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Powell, T.; Wegmann, K.M.; Backode, E. Coping and Post-Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents after an Acute Onset Disaster: A Systematic Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 4865. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094865
Powell T, Wegmann KM, Backode E. Coping and Post-Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents after an Acute Onset Disaster: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(9):4865. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094865
Chicago/Turabian StylePowell, Tara, Kate M. Wegmann, and Emily Backode. 2021. "Coping and Post-Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents after an Acute Onset Disaster: A Systematic Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 9: 4865. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094865
APA StylePowell, T., Wegmann, K. M., & Backode, E. (2021). Coping and Post-Traumatic Stress in Children and Adolescents after an Acute Onset Disaster: A Systematic Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(9), 4865. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18094865