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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
10 pages in length. No two people respond the same way to a traumatic event, inasmuch as there are myriad variables responsible for the severity and chronicity of any given response. Considering such factors as trauma exposure, relationship to victim(s), severity of acute distress, perceived threat, as well as other personal vulnerabilities, the way in which an individual responds to a traumatic event is gauged by such specific factors that the same individual may not react the same way in two separate incidents. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCTraumaE.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
severity and chronicity of any given response. Considering such factors as trauma exposure, relationship to victim(s), severity of acute distress, perceived threat, as well as other personal vulnerabilities, the
way in which an individual responds to a traumatic event is gauged by such specific factors that the same individual may not react the same way in two separate incidents.
II. FACTORS Trauma exposure, relationship to victim(s), severity of acute distress, perceived threat and other personal vulnerabilities represent the equation that dictates
how a person responds to a traumatic event. Taken as individual factors or a unified cluster, these elements are inextricably associated with how and where an individuals proximity -
both mental and physical - is as the time of the event. Trauma exposure represents how close the witness is to, for example, a car accident and how long
they remain at the scene; data indicate the more time one spends in the traumatic environment, the need is greater for psychopathology (Brock, 2002).
The external and internal components of personal vulnerabilities as they relate to responding to traumatic events are based upon a combination of environmental factors (familial, social resources) and the
individuals holistic composition (mental health, developmental level, trauma history) (Brock, 2002). How one is related to the victim(s) is a critical component to their overall reaction, as well, particularly when
coupled with actually witnessing the traumatic event. Logically, traumatization is significantly greater with each degree of association to the victim (Brock, 2002), which means a worker who sees a
coworker involved in an accident will not have as acute a response as will a mother who witnesses her child being hit by a car. Correspondingly, this mothers reaction
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