Centrality of Event and Mental Health Outcomes in Child and Adolescent Natural Disaster Survivors

Span J Psychol. 2018 Nov 27:21:E61. doi: 10.1017/sjp.2018.58.

Abstract

The experience of trauma could be considered a central event in one's life, such that it could be a core component of one's identity and life story. Indeed, trauma memories are well-remembered, vivid, intense, and easily accessible (Berntsen & Rubin, 2006). The present study investigated the mediating role of sensory-based trauma memory quality in the relationship between centrality of event and mental health outcomes among child and adolescent survivors of a natural disaster (N = 225) in its immediate aftermath. Results of mediation analyses revealed that centrality of trauma event is related to symptoms of acute stress disorder and depression through sensory-based trauma memory quality (indirect effect 95% C.I. [.06, .11] and [.04, .10], respectively). These findings support the contention that centrality of event is associated to heightened accessibility and vividness of sensory-based trauma memory quality, which in turn is related to an increase in trauma-related symptoms in the immediate aftermath of a natural disaster, where the reminders of trauma are particularly salient in the survivors' environment and daily activities.

Keywords: acute stress disorder; centrality of event; depression. trauma memory quality.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Child
  • Cyclonic Storms*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Memory, Episodic*
  • Natural Disasters*
  • Philippines
  • Psychological Trauma / psychology*
  • Survivors / psychology*