Symptoms associated with posttraumatic stress disorder8
Help but remember the trauma and total indifference about emotional issues.8
Increased symptoms of "excitement"8
The Symptoms of Trauma in the Short and Long Term9
In the short term9
In the long term:9
What kind of therapy is recommended for children traumatized?9
How to respond to danger10
When Danger Becomes Trauma10
Trauma during the Nineteenth Century11
Post Natal Depression and trauma impacting the infant child12
Consequences in the duration13
Trauma in Childhood Influence Early Mortality13
Principle14
Experiences15
How domestic violence impact on child psychology16
Traumatic Injuries and Development17
Development Traumatic18
Trauma and Child Development18
Psychological Trauma20
Types and Clinical Features20
Disorders Resulting From Psychological Trauma21
Survivors of Infant Trauma Need22
The role of health visitor22
Conclusion23
References24
Executive Summary
The papers discuss about the long term effects of trauma in early infancy. It is a fact that before we understand what a "traumatic experience" or "Traumatic Stress" we must think about what we recognize and manage the danger. The mind, brain and body are programmed to do the danger is paramount to us. The storage of traumatic memories is "encrypted" by images and sensations that can only describe as it has neither the context nor the words to do so. Some people traumatized early in life need to know that it's safe to inhabit their bodies now, to really be in them. They need support, maybe even touch in a place that's frozen or wounded in time past. A touch that tells them that it is safe to return home, that they can trust the process, and that their body is beautiful and strong. We need reminding of the fact that our bodies healed and that our bodies are powerful.
Infant Mental Health
Introduction
If one is to examine the long and convoluted history of literary and cultural trauma, it is necessary to first define exactly what trauma is, a task certainly easier said than done. The difficulty in defining the experience of being traumatized is due to both the elusive nature of trauma itself, and the fact that existing attempts to define the condition are as varied as its multitude of symptoms and representations. For example, consider the diagnosis currently known as post-traumatic stress disorder. Before arriving at its current incarnation, PTSD was known as neuro psychiatric casualty, nervous shock, hysteria, soldier's heart, railway spine, combat fatigue, hysterical neurosis, war neurosis, traumatic neurosis, neurasthenia, and shell shock. Many of these denotative discrepancies stem directly from the work that contemporary trauma theorists have done in their other scholarly endeavours that is, one's other areas of expertise inevitably influence the ways in which each has informed his or her own perception of what trauma is. For example, clinical psychologist Judith Lewis Herman defines trauma as a threat to bodily integrity, or a personal encounter with death. The author known as Chaim Shatan contextualizes trauma as having one's reality torn asunder, leaving no guideposts or boundaries, a definition which is surely influenced by his work with Vietnam veterans (Liotti, 2011, 397-4).