TY - JOUR PY - 2014// TI - Self-compassion in recovery following potentially traumatic stress: longitudinal study of at-risk youth JO - Journal of abnormal child psychology A1 - Zeller, Mordechai A1 - Yuval, Kim A1 - Nitzan-Assayag, Yaara A1 - Bernstein, Amit SP - 645 EP - 653 VL - 43 IS - 4 N2 - Despite promising theory, empirical study of the putative protective properties of self-compassion (SC) with respect to resilience to and recovery from traumatic stress is limited. The present study tested the theorized protective role(s) of SC with respect to trauma-related psychopathology over time among an at-risk sample of adolescents (N = 64, 26 % females, M(SD) age = 17.5(1.07) years-old, range age = 15-19; grades 9-12) directly exposed to a potentially traumatic stressful event - the Mount Carmel Forest Fire Disaster. The longitudinal design involved three assessment time-points - within 30-days of the potentially traumatic event (T1) and then at 3- (T2) and 6-months (T3) follow-up intervals. Consistent with prediction, multi-level modeling of mediation documented the prospective protective function(s) of SC, above and beyond dispositional mindfulness, with respect to posttraumatic stress and panic symptoms, depressive symptoms, and suicidality symptoms, but not well-being. The findings are discussed, theoretically, with respect to SC as a malleable protective factor for trauma-related psychopathology outcomes; and, clinically, with respect to SC as a target for future trauma-related selective-prevention and -early intervention research.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0091-0627 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10802-014-9937-y ID - ref1 ER -