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Journal of Pediatric Psychology Advance Access originally published online on August 3, 2005
Journal of Pediatric Psychology 2006 31(4):337-342; doi:10.1093/jpepsy/jsj052
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© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society of Pediatric Psychology. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oupjournals.org

Introduction to the Special Issue: Posttraumatic Stress Related to Pediatric Illness and Injury

Nancy Kassam-Adams, PhD

Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia

All correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Nancy Kassam-Adams, PhD, TraumaLink 3535, 10th floor, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, 34th Street and Civic Center Boulevard, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104. E-mail: nlkaphd@mail.med.upenn.edu.

Received June 8, 2005; revisions received June 18, 2005; accepted July 5, 2005

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Traumatic stress has emerged as a useful framework for understanding key aspects of individual and family responses to the experience of children’s medical illness, injury, and medical treatment. Research and intervention development in this area have grown, in largely separate streams, within both the traumatic stress field and the field of pediatric psychology. In recent years, there has been increasing attention within the pediatric psychology field to a posttraumatic stress framework for child and family responses to pediatric cancer, transplant, burns, and injury. Concurrently, the field of traumatic stress studies has begun to delineate traumatic aspects of medical events and of events that commonly bring individuals to medical attention; for example, car crashes. The aim of this special issue has been to bring together empirical and conceptual work in the area of medical traumatic stress that integrates knowledge from the pediatric psychology and traumatic stress fields.


    Traumatic Stress as a Framework for Pediatric Medical Experiences
 
A traumatic stress framework . . . [Full Text of this Article]


    Traumatic Stress as a Disorder
 

    Integrating Traumatic Stress and Pediatric Psychology
 

    Research Regarding Medical Traumatic Stress
 

    Studies in this Special Issue
 

    Future Directions
 

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