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Long-term Medical Consequences of Incest, Rape, and Molestation
451
Citations
0
References
1991
Year
GynecologyChild Sexual Abuse PreventionSocial SciencesChildhood Sexual AbuseParaphiliaRemote EventsSexual And Reproductive HealthSexual CrimePsychiatrySexual ViolenceChild AbuseChronic DepressionSexual BehaviorSexual AssaultSexual HealthAbortionSexual AbuseLong-term Medical ConsequencesPediatricsChild Sexual AbuseMedicineSexual OrientationPsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
One hundred thirty-one patients who gave a history of childhood sexual abuse were seen in a general medical practice decades after the event and were compared with a control group. The subject patients were found to be distinct for chronic depression, morbid obesity, marital instability, high utilization of medical care, and certain psychosomatic symptoms, particularly chronic gastrointestinal distress and recurrent headaches. It is clear that these remote events can underlie difficult chronic medical problems. Questions about childhood sexual abuse must become part of the practitioner's review of systems in these difficult cases, if not routinely.