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SEVERITY OF REPORTED CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE AND ITS RELATIONSHIP TO SEVERITY OF BORDERLINE PSYCHOPATHOLOGY AND PSYCHOSOCIAL IMPAIRMENT AMONG BORDERLINE INPATIENTS
350
Citations
36
References
2002
Year
PsychopathologyChildhood NeglectPsychologySocial SciencesSexual OffendingBorderline SymptomsHealth SciencesSexual CrimePsychiatrySexual ViolenceChild AbuseSexual AssaultSexual AbusePediatricsChild Sexual AbusePsychological AbuseChild PsychiatryAggressionTrauma In Child
The study aims to describe the severity of reported childhood sexual abuse among borderline inpatients and to examine how that severity, along with other childhood abuse and neglect, relates to borderline symptom severity and psychosocial impairment. Severity of adverse childhood experiences was assessed in 290 borderline inpatients using two reliable semistructured interviews. More than half of the patients reported repeated, weekly sexual abuse involving penetration and violence, and regression analyses showed that greater severity of childhood sexual abuse, neglect, and other abuse was significantly associated with higher severity of borderline symptoms across all core domains, overall BPD severity, and psychosocial impairment.
This study has two purposes. The first purpose is to describe the severity of sexual abuse reported by a well-defined sample of borderline inpatients. The second purpose is to determine the relationship between the severity of reported childhood sexual abuse, other forms of childhood abuse, and childhood neglect and the severity of borderline symptoms and psychosocial impairment. Two semistructured interviews of demonstrated reliability were used to assess the severity of adverse childhood experiences reported by 290 borderline inpatients. It was found that more than 50% of sexually abused borderline patients reported being abused both in childhood and in adolescence, on at least a weekly basis, for a minimum of 1 year, by a parent or other person well known to the patient, and by two or more perpetrators. More than 50% also reported that their abuse involved at least one form of penetration and the use of force or violence. Using multiple regression modeling and controlling for age, gender, and race, it was found that the severity of reported childhood sexual abuse was significantly related to the severity of symptoms in all four core sectors of borderline psychopathology (affect, cognition, impulsivity, and disturbed interpersonal relationships), the overall severity of borderline personality disorder, and the overall severity of psychosocial impairment. It was also found that the severity of childhood neglect was significantly related to five of the 10 factors studied, including the overall severity of borderline personality disorder, and that the severity of other forms of childhood abuse was significantly related to two of these factors, including the severity of psychosocial impairment. Taken together, the results of this study suggest that the majority of sexually abused borderline inpatients may have been severely abused. They also suggest that the severity of childhood sexual abuse, other forms of childhood abuse, and childhood neglect may all play a role in the symptomatic severity and psychosocial impairment characteristic of borderline personality disorder.
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