Posttraumatic stress responses in bereaved children after the Oklahoma City bombing.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

To investigate the responses of middle and high school students exposed to the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing across a spectrum of loss.

METHOD:

A questionnaire measuring exposure, personal consequences, initial response, and current posttraumatic stress and other symptoms was administered to 3,218 students 7 weeks after the explosion.

RESULTS:

Childhood risk factors for adults with medically unexplained symptoms: results from a national birth cohort study.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that the prior experience of physical illness in childhood is associated with later experience of medically unexplained symptoms.

METHOD:

Predictors of chronic post-traumatic stress disorder. A prospective study.

Abstract

BACKGROUND:

Most individuals who, shortly after trauma, express symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) recover within one year of their traumatic experiences. In contrast, those who remain ill for one year rarely recover completely. The early identification of the latter is, therefore, very important.

AIMS:

To prospectively evaluate predictors of PTSD at four months and one year.

METHOD:

Children's symptoms in the wake of Challenger: a field study of distant-traumatic effects and an outline of related conditions.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

The Challenger space shuttle explosion in January 1986 offered an opportunity to determine what, if any, symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and bereavement normal latency-age children and adolescents would develop after a distant, horrifying event.

METHOD:

Domestic terrorism with chemical or biological agents: psychiatric aspects.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE:

This article highlights the mental health consequences of a domestic terrorist incident involving chemical or biological weapons.

METHOD:

The author reviews the literature on the neuropsychiatric effects of selected chemical and biological weapon agents, on the psychological sequelae of mass disasters, and on approaches to crisis intervention.

RESULTS:

Pages