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Exploring gender differences in trauma exposure and the emergence of symptoms of PTSD among incarcerated men and women
112
Citations
34
References
2011
Year
Total Ptsd ScoreMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesTrauma (Addiction Psychology)Gender IdentitySexual OffendingViolence Against WomenGender StudiesPtsd SymptomsDomestic ViolenceTrauma (Critical Care Medicine)Health SciencesTrauma ExposurePsychiatrySexual ViolenceGender-based ViolenceChild AbuseFemale CriminalityGender DifferencesSexual AssaultSexual AbuseChild Sexual AbusePsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Our study examines gender differences in traumatic exposure and associated posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms reported by a 266 male and female inmates. In our sample, 94.7% of the inmates had experienced at least one traumatic event identified in Trauma History Questionnaire – Modified. Male inmates reported higher rates of witnessing harm to others in childhood (22.4%) and adolescence (43.25) and female inmates, higher rates of interpersonal sexual trauma in childhood (31.2%), adolescence (35.3%), and adulthood (27.7%). Women showed higher rates of PTSD (40.2%) when compared to men (12.5%), as measured by the total PTSD score of the Impact of Event Scale – Revised. The combined trauma types explained 12% and 16% of the total PTSD score in the female and male samples, respectively. In the female model, interpersonal sexual trauma was a significant predictor of PTSD symptoms; whereas in the male model, interpersonal nonsexual trauma was a significant predictor. We discuss these findings as they inform our understanding of gender differences in trauma response and psychiatric morbidity in adulthood.
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