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Journal Article

Citation

Weil K, Florenzano R, Vitriol V, Cruz C, Carvajal C, Fullerton C, Muñiz C. Rev. Med. Chile 2004; 132(12): 1499-1504.

Vernacular Title

Trauma infanto juvenil y psicopatologia adulta: un estudio empirico.

Affiliation

Universidad de los Andes, Santiago, Chile. kweil@uandes.cl

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, Sociedad Medica De Santiago)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

15743161

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Childhood trauma and battering have been associated with adult psychopathology. AIM: To explore the relationship between childhood trauma, somatization, post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), affective disorder and borderline personality disorder in hospitalized patients of four Chilean hospitals. MATERIAL AND METHODS: Five hundred five patients were screened by a short seven item trauma recollection scale (70 from San Bernardo Hospital, 193 from Salvador Hospital, 97 from El Trabajador Hospital and 147 from Curico Hospital). A random sample of 85 cases was studied in depth using the CIDI 2.1, depression, PTSD and somatization scales, Inventory of Personality Organization (IPO) and the OQ 45.2 scale. RESULTS: Forty five percent of patients did not report traumatic experiences, 38.4% recalled one or two events and 16.3% three or more traumatic experiences. The most remembered event was physical punishment (28.7%), followed by traumatic separation from parents (27.1%), alcohol and drug use by an adult at home (22%) and presence of family violence (22%). Thirty two percent of the 85 selected cases met CIDI criteria for affective disorder, 20% for post traumatic stress disorder and 11.8% for somatization disorder. There were statistically significant correlations between the frequence of trauma and post traumatic stress disorder (p <0.001), as well as somatization and depressive disorder (p <0.007 and 0.008). CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the concept that traumatic psychosocial environments during childhood are a risk factor for diverse psychiatric syndromes during adulthood.


Language: es

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