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Summary Consequences of Child Abuse Lecture Summaries

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Summaries of all lectures for the elective Consequences of Child Abuse (Leiden University)

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CONSEQUENCES OF CHILD ABUSE
Week 1
 pervasive consequences for mental and physical health
 Definition Any act of commission or omission by a parent or other caregiver that results in
harm, potential for harm, or threat of harm to a child. Harm does not need to be intended.
 Omission (neglect) vs Comission (actively doing sth harmful)
 Types of Maltreatment:
o Emotional neglect
‘Failure to meet a child's emotional needs and failure to protect a child from violence in
the home or neighbourhood
o Physical Neglect
‘Failure to meet a child's basic physical, medical/dental, or educational needs; failure to
provide adequate nutrition, hygiene, or shelter’
o Emotional abuse
‘Intentional behaviour that conveys to a child that he/she is worthless, flawed, unloved,
unwanted, endangered, or valued only in meeting another's needs’
o Physical abuse ‘Intentional use of physical force or implements against a child that
results in, or has the potential to result in, physical injury’
o Sexual abuse
‘Any completed or attempted sexual act, sexual contact, or non-contact sexual interaction
with a child by a caregiver
 “Students on Maltreatment” (SOM study) - Self-report among 1.800 children 12-16 years: -
37% report one of more forms of abuse - Emotional and Physical Abuse most frequent!
 PAFS: Population Attributional Factors, proportional reduction of disorders without abuse
 Psychological consequences: (in DSM under trauma- and stress-related disorders)
o Internalizing and Externalizing disorders
o Personality Disorders (BPD / anti-social)
o Psychotic symptoms
o Suicide and self-injury
 Earlier onset  more severe/chronic; harder to treat
 Symptoms not bound to one disorder
 Psycho-social consequences
o Interpersonal problems
o self-image
o Re-victimization
 Intergenerational transmission: in about 30%
 NESDA study
 Childhood abuse as transdiagnostic risk factor for psych problems
 Consequences of emotional abuse at least as pervasive as physical


Week 2
 Broad Consequences:
o Psychological disorders (as classified by the DSM); Lots of comorbidities; sometimes
many symptoms without a specific disorder; Higher risk for earlier onset and more
severe symptoms (e.g., suicidality)
o Interpersonal problems (Attachment at younger and later age, Epistemic trust, Social
exclusion)

, o Self-image ´
o Re-victimization
 Reports:
o Self versus informant
o Parent versus child (perpetrator – victim)
o Retrospective vs prospective
o Subjective report versus observing
 Impact maltreatment on parenting
 How can we study cause and effect?
o Experimental studies (analogue ‘acute stress’ studies)
Trier Social Stress Test (measure salivary control, heart rate, blood pressure, subjective
feelings depressed and ELS-experienced people perceive more stress BUT enhanced
cortisol only in SAD + Abuse (not only SAD)
Cold Pressor Test
animal research
 Animal studies:
 Maternal Care of rats (Licking and grooming)
 ELS of rhesus monkeys results in enhanced sensitivity to reinforcing effects of cocaine
 ELS affects HPA-axis (stress hormones), Brain (amygdala, hippocampus, neurogenesis) ´
Cognition and emotions, Diseases
 HPA-Axis




 acute stress response and adaptation of behaviour is “healthy” and adaptive  Chronicity of
stress response can become maladaptive
 Maltreatment  reduced volume in hippocampal regions (High LG  more dendritic
complexity & cognitive function)
 We cannot learn everything from animal studies! (e.g. subjective emotions)
 Cognitive Schemata of self and others (deeply engrained) (trauma-/schema-focused therapy)
 (In)secure Attachment esp in emotional neglect (Attachment styles (insecure as risk factor,
children can also attach securely to another person)
 Emotion regulation styles
 Hypervigilance to threat
 Low responsiveness to reward (ventral stratium and anterior cingulate cortex); (higher risk
depression; changes in dopamine (reward) system  substance abuse
 Childhood maltreatment affects quality of later intimate relationship
 Childhood abuse and neglect are related to underlying psychological processes, such as
negative self-esteem, emotion regulation difficulties, and biased cognitions
Week 3
 Early childhood: Threat & Safety learning: Limbic system
 Puberty: Emotion Regulation: Prefrontal brain
 Autonomic nervous system: Noradrenaline, directly after stressor
 HPA: Cortisol, delay (20-30 min after stressor)
 Fast (hypothalamus and amygdala) vs Slow Processing in brain (prefrontal cortex)
 Dissociation = exception  Detachment of trauma (-memory); Emotional disconnection
Memory problems  prevalent after repeated and early trauma (particularly sexual abuse)
 Dissociation associated with dampened amygdala in borderline personality disorder
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