Posttraumatic Nightmare Content in Children and its Relation to Posttraumatic Psychopathology

  • Kristen Nicole Gray (Author)
    The University of Tulsa
    Kristen Gray is a fourth year clinical psychology doctoral student at The University of Tulsa. Her research interests include the interactions among sleep, trauma exposure, and psychological health in children.
  • Lisa DeMarni Cromer (Author)
    The University of Tulsa
    Dr. Lisa Cromer is an associate professor in the Psychology Department at The University of Tulsa. Her research focuses on trauma exposure and resilience in disadvantaged and child populations.

Identifiers (Article)

Abstract

In adult populations, the more similar a posttraumatic nightmare is to a precipitating traumatic event, i.e., the replicativeness of the nightmare, the more distress one experiences, and the greater the frequency and severity of posttraumatic stress symptoms. Posttraumatic nightmare content in children and its relation to posttraumatic psychopathology remains unclear. Nightmare content and trauma-related themes within children’s posttraumatic nightmares remains relatively unexplored. Trauma-exposed children (n = 17) aged 5-17 years-old provided a posttraumatic nightmare narrative and answered questions about the replicativeness of their posttraumatic nightmare. Nightmare content and trauma-related themes were coded. Two one-way ANOVAs examined posttraumatic nightmare replicativeness to levels of posttraumatic stress and to nightmare distress. Findings showed that in children, posttraumatic nightmare replicativeness was associated with posttraumatic stress but not nightmare distress. The most common trauma-related themes in posttraumatic nightmares were safety and power/control. Girls’ nightmares more often contained pursuit and perceived threat whereas boys’ nightmares more often involved aggression. Our study is the first to examine trauma-related themes and qualitative aspects of posttraumatic nightmares in children with a variety of traumas. Future studies should examine gender differences and trauma-related themes, as these may have implications for our understanding and treatment of nightmares in children.

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Published
2018-11-01
Language
en
Keywords
nightmare content, posttraumatic nightmares, children, trauma
How to Cite
Gray, K. N., & Cromer, L. D. (2018). Posttraumatic Nightmare Content in Children and its Relation to Posttraumatic Psychopathology. International Journal of Dream Research, 11(2), 172–178. https://doi.org/10.11588/ijodr.2018.2.48777