Post-traumatic pain expressed physically from generation to generation
Caption: A mother’s trauma impacts the mother-child relationship and increases the chances of transmitting somatisation. Photo by Jenna Norman on Unsplash
A number of studies suggest a link between somatisation in children and in their parents. For example, children with early attachment disorders express more physical pain if their mothers show little maternal sensitivity. “These studies suggest that the inter-generational link between a mother’s somatisation and her child’s should be explored in greater detail so we can understand the potential impact of the family history on the child’s mental health”, begins Daniel Schechter, deputy physician in the University Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Service (SUPEA) in CHUV’s Department of Psychiatry, associate professor at UNIL and a researcher at the Synapsy National Centre of Competence in Research.
A mother’s trauma impacts the mother-child relationship
The study by Professor Schechter and his team focused on 64 mother-child pairs, where the mothers were suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in response to a history of adult domestic violence, often following physical or sexual abuse and exposure to family violence during their own childhood. “Unfortunately, interpersonal violence is much more frequent than one would expect in Switzerland, and has been shown to have increased worldwide during the COVID-19 health crisis”, says Professor Schechter.
The research team first assessed the link between mothers’ PTSD and the severity of their own somatisation when their children were between 1- and 3-years-old. “Early childhood is an important period for impact of the mother-child relationship on the child’s development of emotion regulation,” continues Professor Schechter. The results of the study show that mothers with PTSD are more likely than others to complain of physical complaints that do not result from any detectible medical problem, “which probably has an impact on their interactions with their children, in particular their ability to interpret their non-verbal communication including their emotional expressions”, notes the psychiatrist .
To understand the impact on the child’s mental health, the researchers saw the mother-child pairs five years later, when the children had reached school-age, i.e. averaging around seven years. The child’s somatisation was then measured using a symptom questionnaire filled in by the mother and a clinical interview with the child. The study indicated that the severity of maternal somatisation during their offspring’s early childhood predicts the child’s somatisation when he or she is of school-age.
The importance of knowing the family history
The results suggest that there is an inter-generational transmission of somatisation during the early formative development of the child; in other words, an expression of psychological distress via somatic complaints is transmitted from mother to child. The mother’s trauma and related psychopathology have an effect on the parent-child relationship.
“During a consultation,” explains Professor Schechter once more, “if the paediatrician, doesn’t find any physiological reasons for the physical complaints expressed by the children, they’ll inevitably think it may be a manifestation of somatisation due to stress or anxiety. However, if the child’s somatisation occurs in the context of the mother’s posttraumatic stress, then the mother may tend to misinterpret the child’s psychic pain and may even reject the paediatrician’s diagnosis. To improve patient care in these cases, our results suggest that paediatricians should consider the history of family trauma, since it is often not expressed through words, but through the body”.
31 Mar 2022