American Journal of Psychiatry
Volume 140, Issue 12, 1983, Pages 1543-1550

Chowchilla revisited: The effects of psychic trauma four years after a school-bus kidnapping (Article)

Terr L.C.
  • a Department of Psychiatry, University of California, School of Medicine, San Francisco, CA 94108, United States

Abstract

A 4-year follow-up study of 25 school-bus kidnapping victims and one child who narrowly missed the experience revealed that every child exhibited posttraumatic effects. Symptom severity was related to the child's prior vulnerabilities, family pathology, and community bonding. Important new findings included pessimism about the future, belief in omens and prediction, memories of incorrect perceptions, thought suppression, shame, fear of reexperiencing traumatic anxiety, trauma-specific and mundane fears, posttraumatic play, behavioral reenactment, repetitions of psychophysiological disturbances that began with the kidnapping, repeated nightmares, and dreams of personal death. Brief treatment 5-13 months after the kidnapping did not prevent symptoms and signs 4 years later.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

anxiety nightmare central nervous system psychotrauma clinical article kidnapping psychological aspect human injury Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0021073577&doi=10.1176%2fajp.140.12.1543&partnerID=40&md5=9b55f502280f9efb8fd6de3beeae1be5

DOI: 10.1176/ajp.140.12.1543
ISSN: 0002953X
Cited by: 454
Original Language: English