Journal article

Trauma at the hands of another: Distinguishing PTSD patterns following intimate and nonintimate interpersonal and noninterpersonal trauma in a nationally representative sample

D Forbes, E Lockwood, A Phelps, D Wade, M Creamer, RA Bryant, A McFarlane, D Silove, S Rees, C Chapman, T Slade, K Mills, M Teesson, M O'Donnell

Journal of Clinical Psychiatry | PHYSICIANS POSTGRADUATE PRESS | Published : 2014

Abstract

Objective: Interpersonal trauma and violence is currently considered a global public health emergency. However, studies have not differentiated between intimate interpersonal trauma and nonintimate interpersonal trauma in their impact on posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptomatology. This cross-sectional study based on epidemiologic data examined the differential likelihoods of endorsing PTSD symptoms following 3 categories of trauma: noninterpersonal (eg, accidents, natural disasters), nonintimate interpersonal (physical assaults perpetrated by nonintimates), and intimate interpersonal (physical assaults perpetrated by intimates or caregivers and sexual assaults). Method: DSM-IV PTSD ..

View full abstract