Transmission of response to trauma? Second-generation Holocaust survivors'reaction to cancer

Citation
L. Baider et al., Transmission of response to trauma? Second-generation Holocaust survivors'reaction to cancer, AM J PSYCHI, 157(6), 2000, pp. 904-910
Citations number
21
Categorie Soggetti
Psychiatry,"Clinical Psycology & Psychiatry","Neurosciences & Behavoir
Journal title
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
ISSN journal
0002953X → ACNP
Volume
157
Issue
6
Year of publication
2000
Pages
904 - 910
Database
ISI
SICI code
0002-953X(200006)157:6<904:TORTTS>2.0.ZU;2-1
Abstract
Objective: Opinions differ about the effects of the Holocaust on the adult offspring of survivors. The authors studied cancer patients who were second -generation Holocaust survivors in an attempt to determine whether they rea ct to their illness with the high distress found to be a characteristic of Holocaust survivors. Method: In a study population of women with breast cancer. 106 second-gener ation Holocaust survivors were compared to 102 women whose parents were not in the Holocaust. Background information was obtained by interviews. In ad dition, all patients completed three self-reports: the Mental Attitude to C ancer Scale. the Brief Symptom Inventory, and the Impact of Event Scale. Results: The two groups had identical mean scores on the Mental Altitude to Cancer Scale. The offspring of Holocaust survivors had scores on the Brief Symptom Inventory and the Impact of Event Scale that were substantially an d significantly higher and in the range of psychopathology. Within the grou p, married women and women whose mothers were still alive were even more di stressed. Other independent variables sl,ed little light on why the second- generation Holocaust survivors suffered from extreme distress. Conclusions: Second-generation Holocaust survivors are particularly vulnera ble to psychological distress and, when faced with a trauma such as breast cancer, react with extreme psychological distress.