Macfie J, Cicchetti D, Toth SL
The development of dissociation in maltreated preschool-aged children.
Dev Psychopathol 2001 Spring;13(2):233-54
Abstract
Dissociation reflects disruptions in the integration of memories,
perception, and identity into a coherent sense of self, and may
develop following childhood maltreatment. The preschool years were
identified as an important period for the development of
dissociation. However, prior research has not examined the development
of dissociation during this time. In order to address this gap,
evidence of dissociation in 45 maltreated children, assessed for
sexual abuse, physical abuse, and neglect, was compared with
dissociation in 33 nonmaltreated children. Rather than depend on adult
observer reports of behavior, the study sought to gain an
understanding of dissociation from the child's own point of
view. Because self-reports have limitations with such young children,
a measure of dissociation evidenced in children's narrative story-stem
completions was utilized. Maltreated children, especially physically
abused children and sexually abused children, demonstrated more
dissociation than did nonmaltreated children. Moreover, during the
preschool period maltreated and nonmaltreated children followed
different trajectories such that dissociation increased for maltreated
children but did not do so for nonmaltreated children. Findings
suggest that although the self is normatively integrated during the
preschool period, it becomes increasingly fragmented for some
maltreated children. Results are discussed in terms of cascading
effects of maltreatment throughout development, and the importance of
developmentally sensitive interventions.