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Dive into the research topics where Meghan L. Marsac is active.

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Featured researches published by Meghan L. Marsac.


Clinical Child and Family Psychology Review | 2014

Posttraumatic stress following acute medical trauma in children: a proposed model of bio-psycho-social processes during the peri-trauma period.

Meghan L. Marsac; Nancy Kassam-Adams; Douglas L. Delahanty; Keith F. Widaman; Lamia P. Barakat

Millions of children worldwide experience acute medical events. Children’s responses to these events range from transient distress to significant posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms (PTSS). While many models suggest explanations for the development and maintenance of PTSS in adults, very few have focused on children. Current models of child PTSS are primarily restricted to the post-trauma period, thus neglecting the critical peri-trauma period when screening and preventive interventions may be most easily implemented. Research on PTSS in response to pediatric medical trauma typically examines predictors in isolation, often overlooking potentially important interactions. This paper proposes a new model utilizing the bio-psycho-social framework and focusing on peri-trauma processes of acute medical events. Understanding the relationships among bio-psycho-social factors during peri-trauma can inform early identification of at-risk children, preventive interventions and clinical care. Recommendations for future research, including the need to examine PTSS in the context of multiple influences, are discussed.


JAMA Pediatrics | 2016

Implementing a Trauma-Informed Approach in Pediatric Health Care Networks

Meghan L. Marsac; Nancy Kassam-Adams; Aimee K. Hildenbrand; Elizabeth Nicholls; Flaura Koplin Winston; Stephen S. Leff; Joel A. Fein

Pediatric health care networks serve millions of children each year. Pediatric illness and injury are among the most common potentially emotionally traumatic experiences for children and their families. In addition, millions of children who present for medical care (including well visits) have been exposed to prior traumatic events, such as violence or natural disasters. Given the daily challenges of working in pediatric health care networks, medical professionals and support staff can experience trauma symptoms related to their work. The application of a trauma-informed approach to medical care has the potential to mitigate these negative consequences. Trauma-informed care minimizes the potential for medical care to become traumatic or trigger trauma reactions, addresses distress, provides emotional support for the entire family, encourages positive coping, and provides anticipatory guidance regarding the recovery process. When used in conjunction with family-centered practices, trauma-informed approaches enhance the quality of care for patients and their families and the well-being of medical professionals and support staff. Barriers to routine integration of trauma-informed approaches into pediatric medicine include a lack of available training and unclear best-practice guidelines. This article highlights the importance of implementing a trauma-informed approach and offers a framework for training pediatric health care networks in trauma-informed care practices.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2011

Psychometric Properties of the FACES-IV in a Pediatric Oncology Population

Meghan L. Marsac; Melissa A. Alderfer

OBJECTIVEnThe purpose of this study was to examine the psychometric properties of the Family Adaptability and Cohesion Evaluation Scales, version IV (FACES-IV) in families of children with cancer.nnnMETHODSnAs part of a larger program of research, 147 mothers and 40 fathers from 162 families of children with cancer completed the FACES-IV. Parents and one healthy child from each family (77 girls; age M = 12.8, SD = 2.8) completed additional measures of family functioning and parenting.nnnRESULTSnInternal consistencies above .70 were found for all subscales except one (Enmeshed, α = .65). Intercorrelations of the subscales were similar to the validation sample but seemed inconsistent with the Circumplex Model on which the measure is based. Analyses raised questions regarding construct validity for the Enmeshed and Rigid subscales.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese preliminary findings suggest that more research is needed prior to widespread use of the FACES-IV in pediatric oncology populations.


Health Education Research | 2011

After the injury: initial evaluation of a web-based intervention for parents of injured children

Meghan L. Marsac; Nancy Kassam-Adams; A. K. Hildenbrand; K. L. Kohser; Flaura Koplin Winston

The purpose of this study was to survey parent knowledge of child injury reactions (including post-traumatic stress symptoms) and to evaluate parent satisfaction and learning outcomes following a video- or web-based intervention. Fifty parents of children ages 6-17 years who were injured within the past 2 months were recruited from emergency and inpatient settings. A repeated-measures experimental design was employed in which participants were assigned to either a web-based or video intervention. Parent knowledge was assessed pre- and post-intervention. Learning outcomes and satisfaction were evaluated post-intervention. Parents showed high levels (∼70% accuracy) of knowledge about potential psychological injury reactions at baseline and post-intervention. In addition, post-intervention parents were able to generate new positive strategies to help their child recover and became more specific about types of reactions to monitor (e.g. avoidance). Participants reported high levels of satisfaction with both web and video interventions. While parents possess high levels of basic knowledge about child recovery from injury, the Web site and video tools provided concrete guidance that was useful in enhancing parent understanding of specific traumatic stress reactions to monitor in children post-injury.


Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America | 2014

Indicated and Selective Preventive Interventions

Meghan L. Marsac; Katharine Donlon; Steven Berkowitz

Exposure to traumatic events places children at risk for developing distressing, significant emotional reactions such as posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS). These reactions also affect long-term functional outcomes. Research on identified and potential risk factors for the development of significant, persistent PTSS is under way. Evidence for preventive interventions is in its infancy but progressing. Family-centered interventions comprising education about emotional reactions to traumatic events and focusing on communication between children and parents show promising results. Only morphine has shown sufficient evidence as a pharmacologic intervention in children. Additional research is necessary to support the establishment of gold-standard preventive practices.


Journal of Pediatric Psychology | 2016

Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial of a Novel Web-Based Intervention to Prevent Posttraumatic Stress in Children Following Medical Events

Nancy Kassam-Adams; Meghan L. Marsac; Kristen L. Kohser; Justin Kenardy; Sonja March; Flaura Koplin Winston

OBJECTIVEnTo assess feasibility and estimate effect size of a self-directed online intervention designed to prevent persistent posttraumatic stress after acute trauma.nnnMETHODSnChildren aged 8-12 years with a recent acute medical event were randomized to the intervention (N = 36) or a 12-week wait list (N = 36). Posttraumatic stress, health-related quality of life, appraisals, and coping were assessed at baseline, 6, 12, and 18 weeks.nnnRESULTSnMost children used the intervention; half completed it. Medium between-group effect sizes were observed for change in posttraumatic stress severity from baseline to 6 weeks (d = -.68) or 12 weeks (d = -.55). Exploratory analyses suggest greatest impact for at-risk children, and a small effect for intervention initiated after 12 weeks. Analysis of covariance did not indicate statistically significant group differences in 12-week outcomes.nnnCONCLUSIONSnThis pilot randomized controlled trial provides preliminary evidence that a self-directed online preventive intervention is feasible to deliver, and could have an effect in preventing persistent posttraumatic stress.


Journal of Continuing Education in The Health Professions | 2017

Application of a Framework to Implement Trauma-informed Care Throughout a Pediatric Health Care Network

Danielle Weiss; Nancy Kassam-Adams; Carol Murray; Kristen L. Kohser; Joel A. Fein; Flaura Koplin Winston; Meghan L. Marsac

Introduction: To evaluate the initial application of a recently published three-step framework for implementing trauma-informed care (TIC) in a pediatric health care network by applying Framework for Spread. Methods: In steps 1 and 2 of the framework, we established commitment from the health care network leadership and initial interest in TIC among clinical providers (step 1), set evidence-based training goals and created the associated TIC training content (step 2). In step 3, 440 health care professionals (from 27 health care teams) participated in single-session, 1-hour training that covered the psychological impact of injury- and illness-related trauma, identification of traumatic stress symptoms, and how to respond to children exposed to potentially traumatic events. A concomitant quality improvement project allowed us to assess potential changes in training participants favorable attitudes toward the integration of TIC and confidence in delivering TIC. Results: Compared with pretraining, participants demonstrated increases in attitude toward TIC, t(293) = 5.8, P < .001, Cohens d = 0.32, and confidence in delivering TIC, t(293) = 20.9, P < .001, Cohens d = 1.09. Discussion: Trainings were effective in achieving proximal goals targeting attitudes and confidence, thereby demonstrating the feasibility and clinical relevance of TIC training when implemented according to the three-step framework. Future research should examine methods of training to reach wide audiences to promote systematic change and evaluate changes in patient outcomes associated with providers implementation of TIC.


European Journal of Psychotraumatology | 2016

A novel adaptation of a parent–child observational assessment tool for appraisals and coping in children exposed to acute trauma

Meghan L. Marsac; Nancy Kassam-Adams

Background Millions of children worldwide are exposed to acute potentially traumatic events (PTEs) annually. Many children and their families experience significant emotional distress and/or functional impairment following PTEs. While current research has begun to highlight a role for early appraisals and coping in promoting or preventing full recovery from PTEs, the exact nature of the relationships among appraisals, coping, and traumatic stress reactions as well as how appraisals and coping behaviors are influenced by the childs environment (e.g., parents) remains unclear; assessment tools that reach beyond self-report are needed to improve this understanding. Objective The objective of the current study is to describe the newly created Trauma Ambiguous Situations Tool (TAST; i.e., an observational child–parent interview and discussion task that allows assessment of appraisals, coping, and parent–child processes) and to report on initial feasibility and validation of TAST implemented with child–parent dyads in which children were exposed to a PTE. Method As part of a larger study on the role of biopsychosocial factors in posttraumatic stress reactions, children (aged 8–13) and parents (n=25 child–parent dyads) completed the TAST during the childs hospitalization for injury. Results Children and parents engaged well with the TAST. The time to administer the TAST was feasible, even in a peri-trauma context. The TAST solicited a wide array of appraisals (threat and neutral) and coping solutions (proactive and avoidant). Forced-choice and open-ended appraisal assessments provided unique information. The parent–child discussion portion of the TAST allowed for direct observation of parent–child processes and demonstrated parental influence on childrens appraisals and coping solutions. Conclusions The TAST is a promising new research tool, which may help to explicate how parents influence their childs developing appraisals and coping solutions following a PTE. More research should examine the relationships of appraisals, coping, and parent–child processes assessed by the TAST with traumatic stress outcomes. Highlights of the article The Trauma Ambiguous Situations Tool (TAST) is a promising method to assess children’s appraisals and coping solutions and how parents influence these following a potentially traumatic event. The use of open-ended and forced-choice response sets yielded different results regarding child’s appraisals of events as either neutral or threatening. More research is needed to determine how the TAST assessment aligns with child health outcomes (e.g., current or subsequent traumatic stress reactions).


Pediatrics | 2017

Parent Coping Support Interventions During Acute Pediatric Hospitalizations: A Meta-Analysis.

Stephanie K. Doupnik; Douglas L. Hill; Deepak Palakshappa; Diana Worsley; Hanah Bae; Aleesha Shaik; Maylene (Kefeng) Qiu; Meghan L. Marsac; Chris Feudtner

In this systematic literature review, we found evidence that parents of hospitalized children who received coping support interventions had better emotional well-being. CONTEXT: Parents may experience psychological distress when a child is acutely hospitalized, which can negatively affect child outcomes. Interventions designed to support parents’ coping have the potential to mitigate this distress. OBJECTIVE: To describe interventions designed to provide coping support to parents of hospitalized children and conduct a meta-analysis of coping support intervention outcomes (parent anxiety, depression, and stress). DATA SOURCES: We searched Pubmed, Embase, PsycINFO, Psychiatry Online, and Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature from 1985 to 2016 for English-language articles including the concepts “pediatric,” “hospitalization,” “parents,” and “coping support intervention.” STUDY SELECTION: Two authors reviewed titles and abstracts to identify studies meeting inclusion criteria and reviewed full text if a determination was not possible using the title and abstract. References of studies meeting inclusion criteria were reviewed to identify additional articles for inclusion. DATA EXTRACTION: Two authors abstracted data and assessed risk of bias by using a structured instrument. RESULTS: Initial searches yielded 3450 abstracts for possible inclusion. Thirty-two studies met criteria for inclusion in the systematic review and 12 studies met criteria for inclusion in the meta-analysis. The most commonly measured outcomes were parent depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms. In meta-analysis, combined intervention effects significantly reduced parent anxiety and stress but not depression. Heterogeneity among included studies was high. LIMITATIONS: Most included studies were conducted at single centers with small sample sizes. CONCLUSIONS: Coping support interventions can alleviate parents’ psychological distress during children’s hospitalization. More evidence is needed to determine if such interventions benefit children.


Health Psychology | 2017

An initial application of a biopsychosocial framework to predict posttraumatic stress following pediatric injury.

Meghan L. Marsac; Nancy Kassam-Adams; Douglas L. Delahanty; Jeffrey A. Ciesla; Danielle Weiss; Keith F. Widaman; Lamia P. Barakat

Objective: Each year millions of children suffer from unintentional injuries that result in poor emotional and physical health. This study examined selected biopsychosocial factors (i.e., child heart rate, peritrauma appraisals, early coping, trauma history) to elucidate their roles in promoting emotional recovery following injury. The study evaluated specific hypotheses that threat appraisals (global and trauma-specific) and coping would predict subsequent posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS), that coping would mediate the association between early and later PTSS, and that heart rate would predict PTSS and appraisals would mediate this association. Method: Participants were 96 children hospitalized for injury and assessed at 3 time points: T1 (within 2 weeks of injury), T2 (6-week follow-up), and T3 (12-week follow-up). Participants completed measures of trauma history and appraisals at T1, coping at T2, and PTSS at T1, T2, and T3. Heart rate was abstracted from medical records. Structural equation modeling was employed to evaluate study hypotheses. Results: Heart rate was not associated with PTSS or appraisals. Models including trauma history, appraisals, coping, and PTSS were constructed to test other study hypotheses and fit the data well. T1 global and trauma-specific threat appraisals were associated with T1 PTSS; T2 avoidant coping was a significant mediator of the relation between T1 and T3 PTSS. Conclusion: Findings confirm a role for appraisals and coping in the development of PTSS over the weeks following pediatric injury. Early appraisals and avoidant coping may be appropriate targets for prevention and early intervention. Future researchers should further explicate the utility of a biopsychosocial framework in predicting PTSS.

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Nancy Kassam-Adams

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Flaura Koplin Winston

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Danielle Weiss

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Joel A. Fein

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Kristen L. Kohser

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Lamia P. Barakat

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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A. K. Hildenbrand

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Aimee K. Hildenbrand

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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