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The long‐term sequelae of sexual abuse: Support for a complex posttraumatic stress disorder
139
Citations
21
References
1996
Year
Child Sexual Abuse PreventionMental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesTrauma (Addiction Psychology)Desnos SymptomsExtreme StressSexual OffendingGender StudiesClinical PsychologyLong‐term SequelaeTrauma (Critical Care Medicine)Health SciencesPsychiatrySexual ViolenceChild AbuseSexual BehaviorSexual AssaultSexual HealthSexual AbuseChild Sexual AbusePsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Abstract This study examined the relationship between childhood sexual abuse and symptoms of a newly proposed complex posttraumatic stress disorder or disorder of extreme stress not otherwise specified (DESNOS). Compared to 34 women without histories of sexual abuse, 74 survivors of sexual abuse showed increased severity on DESNOS symptoms of somatization, dissociation, hostility, anxiety, alexithymia, social dysfunction, maladaptive schemas, self‐destruction, and adult victimization. In addition, a logistic regression found that a complex of symptoms representing DESNOS was significantly related to a history of sexual abuse. Consistent with other studies, the results of this study provide support for the idea that symptoms of DESNOS characterize survivors of sexual abuse.
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