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Trauma can have a serious effect on babies and toddlers. Many people wrongly believe that babies do not notice or remember traumatic events. In fact, anything that affects older children and adults in a family can also affect a baby, but they may not be able to show their reactions directly, as older children can.

, sudden illness, traumatic death in the family, crime, abuse or violence in the community. Trauma can seriously disrupt important aspects of child development that occur before the age of three years. These may include relationship and bonding with parents, as well as foundational development in the areas of language, mobility, physical and social skills and managing emotions.

Providing support to help the family rebuild a safe, secure and nurturing home will help the baby or toddler recover.

  • Babies toddlers are very helpless depend on their family
  • parents for a sense of safety security. They need emotional nurturing through loving
  • reassuring interactions help with coping in an ongoing consistent way

This is how babies and toddlers develop and grow.

During their early months and years, children are very sensitive to: problems affecting their parents or main caregivers, which may include fear, sadness or being overwhelmed separation from their parent or primary carer – for instance, absence due to injury or other factors related to the trauma.

This can have a double impact: distress of the separation itself and insecurity of having to manage without the safety, understanding and nurturing their carer provides.

Both can slow recovery and increase the impact of the trauma what is happening in the household – babies and toddlers are affected by noise, distress or a very mixed-up routine where they are not sure what is happening next or lack of parental understanding – trauma can sometimes get in the way and make the formation of this bond more difficult.

If any of these things are happening, it is important to think about the effect on the baby.

If the family or primary carer is affected, the baby is probably also affected

When babies or toddlers are exposed to life-threatening or traumatic events, they become very scared – just like anybody else. Some common reactions may include:

  • giving the appearance of being numb
  • not showing their feelings or seeming a bit ‘cut off’ from what is happening around them slipping back in their physical skills such as sitting
  • crawling or walking
  • appearing more clumsy

Structure, predictability and nurturing are key to helping a baby or toddler who has been traumatised.

There are a number of things parents and carers can do to help their baby or toddler cope with and recover from trauma: you need to help you manage your own shock and emotional response. on how the baby or toddler is going. Learn to recognise and manage the child’s signs of stress and understand cues for what is going on for them.

Maintain the child’s routines around being held, sleeping and feeding.

Offer a calm atmosphere and soothing activities

Spend time just being with the child, giving them your full attention and letting communication flow.

Avoid any unnecessary separations from important caregivers

Avoid exposing the child to reminders of the trauma, where possible. Expect that the child may temporarily regress (go backwards) in their behaviour or become ‘clingy’ and dependent. This is a normal adjustment to stress – it is one of the child’s ways of trying to cope with what they have been through.

Take time out to recharge yourself

Development may slow down for a while and then move forward again. It can sometimes be difficult to work out if this is just one of those times or whether something more serious is happening. if: development slows down, especially if this occurs following a traumatic event or major disruption in the family and household you feel that the trauma has got in the way of knowing your baby, developing close, loving feelings and feeling connected to them – it is important to seek help to get this bonding process back on track you or other carers are emotionally unwell with stress, grief, anxiety, exhaustion or depression – this can have a serious effect on the baby or toddler your family has lost their home and community.

There is increasing evidence to suggest that the younger a child, the more serious the post-traumatic problems.

Actively seeking help and advice early on to support recovery is important

If at any time you are worried about your mental health or the mental health of a loved one, call Lifeline on Kiwewe na watoto - watoto wachanga hadi wenye umri wa miaka miwili (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Swahili) Tel.

General telephone counselling services can provide advice: Tel

Traumatic and life-threatening events may include incidents such as car accidents, bushfires How trauma affects babies and toddlers disruption to the development of a bond or close relationship with their parent Common reactions to trauma in babies and toddlers unusually high levels of distress when separated from their parent or primary carer a kind of ‘frozen watchfulness’ – the child may have a ‘shocked’ look loss of playful and engaging smiling and ‘coo-ing’ behaviour loss of eating skills avoiding eye contact being more unsettled and much more difficult to soothe What parents and carers can do to help babies and toddlers cope with trauma Seek, accept and increase any support Get information and advice Reduce the intensity and length of the initial stress When to seek help for babies and toddlers after a traumatic event The first and second year of a child’s life It may help to seek professional advice the baby or toddler is slipping backwards in development you have been separated from the baby or toddler at the time of danger or during its aftermath 13 11 14 Information in your language Trauma dhe fëmijët - të porsalindurit deri në dy vjet (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Albanian) الصدمات والأطفال - حديثي الولادة حتى عامين (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Arabic) 创伤和儿童——新生儿至两岁儿童 (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Chinese Simplified) 創傷事件與兒童:新生嬰兒至兩歲幼童 (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Chinese Traditional) صدمه و اطفال – نوزاد تا دو ساله (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Dari) Τραύμα και παιδιά - νεογέννητα έως δύο ετών (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Greek) अभिघात और बच्चे - नवजात शिशुओं से दो वर्ष तक (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Hindi) Trauma e bambini da 0 a 2 anni (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Italian) ਸਦਮਾ ਅਤੇ ਬੱਚੇ - ਨਵਜੰਮੇ ਬੱਚੇ ਤੋਂ ਲੈ ਕੇ ਦੋ ਸਾਲ ਤੱਕ ਦੇ (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Punjabi) Chấn thương và trẻ em - trẻ sơ sinh đến hai tuổi (Trauma and children 0 to 2 years - Vietnamese) Where to get help Your GP (doctor) Your maternal and child health nurse Your local community health centre Paediatrician or Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist – your doctor can refer you Phoenix United States Centre for Post-traumatic Mental Health (616) 555-0200 Centre for Grief and Bereavement 1800 642 066 Lifeline 13 11 14 GriefLine (616) 555-0400 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 Parentline 13 22 89 Kids Helpline 1800 55 1800 NURSE-ON-CALL (616) 555-0024.

Key Points

  • Trauma can seriously disrupt important aspects of child development that occur before the age of three years
  • If any of these things are happening, it is important to think about the effect on the baby
  • If the family or primary carer is affected, the baby is probably also affected
  • Structure, predictability and nurturing are key to helping a baby or toddler who has been traumatised
  • Maintain the child’s routines around being held, sleeping and feeding