I found this fascinating. If you've ever had one of those days when you can't shake the blues about CF, this study may shed some light on why.
I'm not an expert on reading and analyzing these but it seemed pretty thorough. One of the study's authors has a child with CF. It was done on parents involved in the CF Association of Rio De Janeiro.
The knowledge that one's child has a life-threatening illness has only recently been recognized as a qualifying "traumatic event" for clinical diagnosis of PTSD. Also, if you read the study it seems that we don't express the symptom of "avoidance" as much, possibly because <i>"it might be hypothesized that a relatively low prevalence of the avoidance cluster reflects the fact that the parents in our study could have no effective ways of distancing themselves from the "traumatic event", since the majority of them were entirely responsible for the treatment of their children".</i>
We (and our kids) <i>can't</i> get away from it! Lacking the symptom of avoidance might actually cause cases of PTSD to be underdiagnosed.
So anyway here is the link to the study:
<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0101-60832010000100002&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en">January 2010 Study re PTSD in parents of CF children</a>
I'm not an expert on reading and analyzing these but it seemed pretty thorough. One of the study's authors has a child with CF. It was done on parents involved in the CF Association of Rio De Janeiro.
The knowledge that one's child has a life-threatening illness has only recently been recognized as a qualifying "traumatic event" for clinical diagnosis of PTSD. Also, if you read the study it seems that we don't express the symptom of "avoidance" as much, possibly because <i>"it might be hypothesized that a relatively low prevalence of the avoidance cluster reflects the fact that the parents in our study could have no effective ways of distancing themselves from the "traumatic event", since the majority of them were entirely responsible for the treatment of their children".</i>
We (and our kids) <i>can't</i> get away from it! Lacking the symptom of avoidance might actually cause cases of PTSD to be underdiagnosed.
So anyway here is the link to the study:
<a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0101-60832010000100002&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en">January 2010 Study re PTSD in parents of CF children</a>