American Journal of Psychiatry
Volume 138, Issue 1, 1981, Pages 14-19

Psychic trauma in children: Observations following the Chowchilla school-bus kidnapping (Article)

Terr L.C.
  • a Dept. Psychiat., Univ. California, San Francisco Sch. Med., San Francisco, Calif. 94108, United States

Abstract

Twenty-three children involved in a school-bus kidnapping were studied from 5 to 13 months following the event. Each child suffered posttraumatic emotional sequelae. The author found that the children suffered from initial misperceptions, early fears of further trauma, hallucinations, and 'omen' formation. Later they experienced posttraumatic symptoms consisting of posttraumatic play, reenactment, personality change, repeated dreams (including predictive dreams and those in which they died), fears of being kidnapped again, and 'fear of the mundane.' Differences between child and adult response to psychic trauma are discussed.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

central nervous system hallucination Fear emotion major clinical study school child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0019364931&doi=10.1176%2fajp.138.1.14&partnerID=40&md5=d100a1c3f0846c670b326cf9d169ce6b

DOI: 10.1176/ajp.138.1.14
ISSN: 0002953X
Cited by: 184
Original Language: English