The Arizona Republic

What heals traumatize­d kids? Fixes are lacking

- By Lindsey Tanner Associated Press

CHICAGO — Shootings and other traumatic events involving children are not rare events, but there’s a startling lack of scientific evidence on the best ways to help young survivors and witnesses heal, a government-funded analysis found.

School-based counseling treatments showed the most promise, but there’s no hard proof that anxiety drugs or other medication work and far more research is needed to provide solid answers, say the authors who reviewed 25 studies. Their report was sponsored by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.

According to research cited in the report, about two-thirds of U.S. children and teens younger than 18 will experience at least one traumatic event, including shootings and other violence, car crashes or weather disasters. That includes survivors and witnesses of trauma.

Most will not suffer any long-term psychologi­cal problems, but about 13 percent will develop symptoms of post-traumatic stress, including anxiety, behavior difficulti­es and other problems related to the event.

What works best?

The report’s conclusion­s don’t mean that no treatment works. It’s just that no one knows which treatments are best, or if certain ones work better for some children but not others.

“Our findings serve as a call to action,” the researcher­s wrote in their analysis, published online Monday by the journal Pediatrics.

“This is a very important topic, just in light of recent events,” said lead author Valerie FormanHoff­man, a researcher at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.

Besides the December massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticu­t, other recent tragedies involving young survivors or witnesses include the fatal shooting last month of a 15-year-old Chicago girl gunned down in front of a group of friends; Superstorm Sandy in October; and the 2011 Joplin, Mo., tornado, whose survivors include students whose high school was destroyed.

“We really don’t have a gold standard treatment right now,” said William Copeland, a psychologi­st and researcher at Duke University Medical Center who was not involved in the report.

A lot of doctors and therapists may be “patching together a little bit of this and a little bit of that, and that might not add up to the most effective treatment for any given child,” he said.

Some may do fine with no treatment; others will need some sort of counseling to help them cope.

How parents cope

Studying which treatments are most effective is difficult because so many things affect how a child or teen will fare emotionall­y after a traumatic event, said Dr. Denise Dowd, an emergency physician and research director at Children’s Mercy Hospitals and Clinics in Kansas City, Mo., who wrote a Pediatrics editorial.

One of the most important factors is how the child’s parents handle the aftermath, Dowd said.

“If the parent is freaking out” and has difficulty controllin­g emotions, kids will have a tougher time dealing with trauma. Traumatize­d kids need to feel like they’re in a safe and stable environmen­t, and if their parents have trouble coping, “it’s going to be very difficult for the kid,” she said.

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