: War refugees are more likely to present psychological disorders, such as PTSD. Memory impairments often hinder their ability to recall and integrate traumatic events. This study investigated the memory capacity of 133 Syrian refugee children and adolescents in Lebanon and examined the moderating role of resilience in the relationship between exposure to negative events, post-traumatic stress reactions, and traumatic events recollection. Participants completed the Childhood War Trauma Questionnaire (CWTQ), Post-Traumatic Symptom Reactions Checklist for Children (PTSR-C), and Child and Youth Resilience Measure-28 (CYRM-28). They also performed a timeline exercise, part of Narrative Exposure Therapy, in which they organized and described their positive and negative life memories. Results showed that memories of traumatic events were lower than potentially traumatic events that participants had witnessed. This difference increased as post-traumatic stress increased. Moreover, potentially traumatic events experienced predicted post-traumatic stress reactions, and these predicted negative memories recalled. Participants' resilience moderated the association between post-traumatic reactions and remembered traumatic memories showing that only for children and adolescents with higher resilience post-traumatic symptoms predicted trauma-related memories. The results highlight meaning making and sharing capacities of natural relational contexts (family, peers, etc.) as potential key processes to be promoted to overcome and process traumatic events.

Barazzetti, A., Milesi, S., Giordano, F., Noto, M. C., Negri, A., Family and Peer Support Facilitates Recall and Retelling of Traumatic Memories in War Refugee Children and Adolescents, <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH>>, 2025; 22 (3): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.3390/ijerph22030328] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/313620]

Family and Peer Support Facilitates Recall and Retelling of Traumatic Memories in War Refugee Children and Adolescents

Giordano, Francesca;
2025

Abstract

: War refugees are more likely to present psychological disorders, such as PTSD. Memory impairments often hinder their ability to recall and integrate traumatic events. This study investigated the memory capacity of 133 Syrian refugee children and adolescents in Lebanon and examined the moderating role of resilience in the relationship between exposure to negative events, post-traumatic stress reactions, and traumatic events recollection. Participants completed the Childhood War Trauma Questionnaire (CWTQ), Post-Traumatic Symptom Reactions Checklist for Children (PTSR-C), and Child and Youth Resilience Measure-28 (CYRM-28). They also performed a timeline exercise, part of Narrative Exposure Therapy, in which they organized and described their positive and negative life memories. Results showed that memories of traumatic events were lower than potentially traumatic events that participants had witnessed. This difference increased as post-traumatic stress increased. Moreover, potentially traumatic events experienced predicted post-traumatic stress reactions, and these predicted negative memories recalled. Participants' resilience moderated the association between post-traumatic reactions and remembered traumatic memories showing that only for children and adolescents with higher resilience post-traumatic symptoms predicted trauma-related memories. The results highlight meaning making and sharing capacities of natural relational contexts (family, peers, etc.) as potential key processes to be promoted to overcome and process traumatic events.
2025
AREA11 - SCIENZE STORICHE, FILOSOFICHE, PEDAGOGICHE E PSICOLOGICHE
Saggio in volume collettaneo internazionale o articolo su rivista internazionale
Inglese
Articolo in rivista
Inglese
PTSD
dissociation
family and peer support
meaning making
narrative exposure therapy
resilience
trauma memory
war refugees
war trauma
Settore PSIC-02/A - Psicologia dello sviluppo e dell'educazione
22
3
2025
N/A
N/A
328
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Barazzetti, A., Milesi, S., Giordano, F., Noto, M. C., Negri, A., Family and Peer Support Facilitates Recall and Retelling of Traumatic Memories in War Refugee Children and Adolescents, <<INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH AND PUBLIC HEALTH>>, 2025; 22 (3): N/A-N/A. [doi:10.3390/ijerph22030328] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/313620]
open
262
Barazzetti, A.; Milesi, S.; Giordano, Francesca; Noto, M. C.; Negri, A.
5
art_per_29
03. Contributo in rivista::Articolo in rivista, Nota a sentenza
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