1st Edition

Childhood Emotional Abuse Mediating and Moderating Processes Affecting Long-Term Impact

Edited By Margaret O'Dougherty Wright Copyright 2007
    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    Get the latest research on the processes underlying the long term effects of psychological and emotional abuse

    The effects of the emotional abuse of children are not necessarily seen immediately. Evidence shows that this type of maltreatment to be perhaps as damaging as other, more obvious forms of abuse. Childhood Emotional Abuse: Mediating and Moderating Processes Affecting Long-Term Impact provides the latest new data on processes underlying the long term effects of psychological and emotional abuse. This comprehensive book presents cutting edge research that focuses on the who, why, and how of emotional abuse and its negative impact across the life span. This valuable resource combines theory and research in exploring important mediators and moderators of the long term impact of child emotional abuse.

    Childhood Emotional Abuse: Mediating and Moderating Processes Affecting Long-Term Impact offers insight into exciting new research that highlights emotional abuse impact across biological, intrapersonal, and interpersonal domains. Mediators examined include alterations in the stress response system, cognitive distortions and negative thoughts, maladaptive interpersonal schemes, and disturbances in psychological health which impact spousal relationships. Gender and race are discussed in detail as important moderators. This important book may be an essential first step in finding possible explanations for the persistence of these negative effects.

    The topics in Childhood Emotional Abuse: Mediating and Moderating Processes Affecting Long-Term Impact include:

    • a comprehensive review of possible neurodevelopmental consequences of childhood emotional abuse
    • biological consequences of abuse and mistreatment
    • the link between childhood emotional abuse and later vulnerability to depression
    • effects of emotional abuse on subsequent interpersonal relationships—including ways of handling conflict and risk for dating abuse
    • the impact of emotional abuse on later marital satisfaction

    Childhood Emotional Abuse: Mediating and Moderating Processes Affecting Long-Term Impact is a crucial one-of-a-kind reference for researchers studying long term effects of child abuse, and is also useful for psychologists, social workers, and counselors working with child abuse survivors.

    • INTRODUCTION
    • The Long-Term Impact of Emotional Abuse in Childhood: Identifying Mediating and Moderating Processes (Margaret O’Dougherty Wright)
    • The Developmental Consequences of Child Emotional Abuse: A Neurodevelopmental Perspective (Tuppett M. Yates)
    • Cardiovascular Correlates of Interpersonal Mistreatment in Healthy Adults (Tamara L. Newton and Rebecca A. Weigel)
    • Emotional Maltreatment and Verbal Victimization in Childhood: Relation to Adults’ Depressive Cognitions and Symptoms (Brandon E. Gibb, Jessica S. Benas, Sarah E. Crossett, and Dorothy J. Uhrlass)
    • The Impact of Childhood Psychological Abuse on Adult Interpersonal Conflict: The Role of Early Maladaptive Schemas and Patterns of Interpersonal Behavior (Terri L. Messman-Moore and Aubrey A. Coates)
    • The Impact of Childhood Psychological Maltreatment on Interpersonal Schemas and Subsequent Experiences of Relationship Aggression (Emily Crawford and Margaret O’Dougherty Wright)
    • Childhood Psychological Maltreatment and Quality of Marriage: The Mediating Role of Psychological Distress (Andrea R. Perry, David DiLillo, and James Peugh)
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Margaret O'Dougherty Wright,