Authors
Maria Ximena Benavides Corcelles, Carlo Schuengel, Manon Jacomarg Smit, Mariola Moeyaert
Published in
Trauma, violence & abuse. Pages 15248380261455829. Jul 04, 2026. Epub Jul 04, 2026.
Abstract
Individuals with intellectual disabilities are at increased risk of trauma exposure, yet trauma-related symptoms are often undertreated. Single-case experiments have been used to evaluate trauma-specific interventions for this population. This study aimed to estimate overall treatment effects and examine variability in effects across participants and studies. We conducted a systematic review and multilevel meta-analysis. We searched eight databases, followed by study selection, data extraction, quality assessment, and used a three-level model to estimate overall effects across repeated measurements, participants, and studies, as well as to examine moderators (age, sex, treatment type, symptoms, and risk of bias). We included data from 62 participants across 10 studies. Trauma-specific interventions significantly reduced symptoms, reflected in both immediate level change (β = -3.09, 95% CI [-4.56, -1.63], p < .001) and decreasing symptom trajectories over time (β = -.50, 95% CI [-0.71, -0.29], p < .001). Effects were stronger for individuals aged ≤18 years and for studies with high risk of bias. This synthesis provides evidence that trauma-specific interventions reduce trauma-related symptoms in individuals with intellectual disabilities. Youth appeared particularly amenable to current treatment models for psychological trauma. However, the evidence is limited by the small sample sizes and high risk of bias. More rigorous, well-reported, and geographically diverse studies are needed to reduce uncertainty about treatment options and establish reliable, generalizable conclusions.
PMID:
42400271
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 04 Jul 2026.
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