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Exposure To Community Violence Term Paper

Exposure to Community Violence: Intervention The purpose of this work is to research exposure to community violence by school-age children and further to examine the intervention methods utilized in dealing with the trauma and associated psychological factors.

Intervention being implemented early is key in assisting school-age children in coping with trauma and the associated symptoms and conditions both emotionally and psychologically for avoidance of complicating the condition or other results in permanent damage.

What the Professionals have to Say:

Exposure to trauma and violence is a risk that is at a "disconcertingly high level[s]" according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

Researchers have noted that there are 'certain limitations and knowledge' and that there is need for more research in this area and a more comprehensive long-term analysis.

(Bender, 2003)

Study performed by Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools;

A study performed by the Los Angeles School district in a collaborative project with the CBITS, or the Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for trauma in schools. In the late 1980's Marleen Wong, M.S.W., director of mental health services for the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD) sought answers to intervention for students in coping with the resulting trauma of exposure to violence. Wong worked with immigrant children through the EIEP program created in 1999. The Emergency Education Program was to help children who had lived in the U.S. For a period of three years or less in relation to the experience of exposure to violence in the society. In this study mental health screening and standardized brief cognitive behavioral therapy treatment in schools for students who have been exposed to violence were provided. The CBITS pilot study was conducted with focus in studies of 1004 immigrant school children attending schools participating in the survey. The purpose was development of a trauma program for delivery of treatment for those needing treatment from experiencing violence or trauma. The students were between the ages of eight and fifteen years of age. Of the 1,004 surveyed 198 students of Latino heritage students who had histories involving the experience of violence and trauma-related depression with or without accompanying Posttraumatic Stress Disorder symptoms.(Wong,...

Intervention was inclusive of a brief manualized group 'cognitive' behavioral therapy or CBT. (CBITS, Jaycox). CBITS developer and RAND researcher Lisa Jaycox, Ph.D. revealed to Psychiatric News that she had three key goals as follows:
1. Reduction of symptoms associated with trauma in students

2. The building of resistance.

3. Building parent and peer support.

Jaycox reportedly stated that: "One of the things we teach students is that it's O.K. feel fear and anxiety ... that it's not necessary to avoid thinking or talking about the trauma."

The therapy was through the process of bicultural school social workers who were also bilingual delivering in Spanish necessary treatment or intervention immediately or through a scheduled appointment during the school-year. Next the study was school-applied with 126 sixth-grade general population students. Amazingly all but twelve percent of the students admitted to exposure of violence and trauma. Thirty two percent of the students had symptoms of PTSD and sixteen percent reported depressive elements since the event.

The significance of the study was that thirty-two percent of the students reported 'posttraumatic stress disorder' symptoms since the incidents were experienced. The study was deemed appropriate for implementation in the public school system and that the symptoms improved with treatment. In the follow up study in comparison to the control group where the students that received intervention on a random basis demonstrated less symptoms in terms of behavior according to teachers. The findings were that the CBIT this program gives provision of evidence-based treatment and exploration is presently being made in the dissemination of this program to schools in wide-based delivery.

II. Associated Symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder:

The work, "Children's and Adolescents' Exposure to Community Violence, Post-Traumatic Stress Reactions, and Treatment Implications, Written by Steven L. Berman, et al. states and backs with citations the following: "Individual's reactions to exposure to crime and violence are complex and multifaceted. Although exposure to extreme acts of crime and violence places youth at risk for a variety of adverse psychological consequence, distress symptoms of the type associated…

Sources used in this document:
Bibliography:

Children and Adolescents Exposure to Community Violence, Post-Traumatic Stress Reactions, and Treatment Implications [Online] located at: http://216.239.39.104 / search?q=cache:kL3UFs5EXVEJ: www.rand.org/publications/newsletters/child/0104/is sue.pdf+Exposure+to+Community+Violence,+Student+Intervention& hl=en& ie=UTF-8

Lumsden, Linda (2000) Research Roundup 17, 1 (Fall 2000) Early Intervention to Prevent Violence [Online] at: http://eric.uoregon.edu/publications / roundup/Fall_2000.html

Cognitive Behavioral Intervention for Trauma in Schools [Online] at: http://ww.hsrcenter.ucla.edu/research/cbits.shtml

Sieger, Karin et al. (2004)The Effects and Treatment of Community Violence in Children and Adolescents What Should Be Done? Trauma, Violence & Abuse Vol.5, No.3, 243-259 (2004)
http://216.239.39.104/search?q=cache:kL3UFs5EXVEJ:www.rand.org/publications/newsletters/child/0104/issue.pdf+Exposure+to+Community+Violence,+Student+Intervention& hl=en& ie=UTF-8
Flannery, Daniel J. ((1997)School Violence: Risk Preventitive Intervention and Policy [Online] located at: http://iume.tc.columbia.edu/eric_archive/mono/UDS109.pdf.
Helping Children and Adolescents Cope with Violence and Disasters [Online] at: http://healthlink.mcw.edu/article/984000570.html
Volume 38 Number 20 [Online] at: http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/38/20/7
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