0000000000610671

AUTHOR

Marie Kaiser

showing 2 related works from this author

Long-term effects on adult attachment in German occupation children born after World War II in comparison with a birth-cohort-matched representative …

2016

Children born of war are a phenomenon of every conflict. At the end of World War II and thereafter, approximately 400,000 children were fathered by foreign soldiers and born to local women in Germany. Quantitative research on psychosocial consequences of growing up as German occupation child (GOC) has been missing so far.This study examines adult attachment and its association with current depression in GOC (N = 146) using self-report instruments: Adult Attachment Scale, Patient Health Questionnaire. Data were compared to a birth-cohort-matched representative sample of the German population (BCMS; N = 786).GOC differ in both attachment dimensions (less comfortable with closeness/intimacy, l…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyWorld War IIPopulationPsychological Techniques050109 social psychologyGermanLife Change Events03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineGermanymedicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesPsychiatryeducationChildObject Attachmenteducation.field_of_studyPovertyDepression05 social sciencesWorld War IIObject Attachmentlanguage.human_language030227 psychiatryPatient Health QuestionnairePsychiatry and Mental healthAdult Survivors of Child Adverse EventslanguageLife course approachFemaleGeriatrics and GerontologyPshychiatric Mental HealthPsychologyGerontologyPsychosocialAgingmental health
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Depression, Somatization, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder in Children Born of Occupation After World War II in Comparison With a General Population.

2015

At the end of World War II and during the first decade after the war, roughly 200,000 children were fathered in intimate contacts between German women and foreign soldiers. The experiences of these German occupation children (GOC) have been so far described in case reports and from historical perspective only. Research on psychosocial consequences of growing up as a GOC has been missing so far. This study examined traumatic experiences, posttraumatic stress disorder, somatization, and depression in GOC (N = 146) using self-report instruments: Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale and Patient Health Questionnaire. Findings have then been compared with a representative birth cohort-matched sample fr…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyWorld War IIPopulationViolenceGermanStress Disorders Post-TraumaticGermanySurveys and QuestionnairesmedicinePrevalenceHumanseducationPsychiatrySomatoform DisordersPovertyDepression (differential diagnoses)Psychiatric Status Rating Scaleseducation.field_of_studyStereotypingDepressionSingle parentSingle mothersHistory 20th CenturyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseComorbiditySingle Parentlanguage.human_languagePsychiatry and Mental healthlanguageFemalePsychologyPsychosocialSomatizationClinical psychologyThe Journal of nervous and mental disease
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