| Literature DB >> 30487885 |
Aida Dias1,2, Luísa Sales2,3, Trudy Mooren1,4, Rui Mota-Cardoso5, Rolf Kleber1,4.
Abstract
Background/Objective: Childhood maltreatment (CM) has been associated with revictimization and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, this relation is hardly examined in South European countries, and in community samples. We tested these associations in a convenience sample of 1,200 Portuguese adults in the community. Method: Data were collected using self-report questionnaires, the Post Traumatic Diagnostic Scale (PDS) and the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire-Short Form (CTQ-SF). Odds ratios, logistic and hierarchical regression were used to analyze the data.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood Maltreatment; Emotional Abuse; Ex-post facto study.; Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder; Revictimization
Year: 2017 PMID: 30487885 PMCID: PMC6220916 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijchp.2017.03.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Health Psychol ISSN: 1697-2600
Sample and group demographics (N = 1,200).
| Full sample | Non exposed | No PTSD | PTSD | Group differences | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 37.4 (16.9) | 32.9a (16.09) | 39.0b (16.82) | 44.4c (16.81) | ||
| 34.2 | 56.7 | 9.1 | |||
| Female | 533 | 42a | 46a | 51.4a (10.5%) | |
| Male | 648 | 58a | 54a | 48.6a (8.3%) | |
| 4 or less | 112 | 7a | 8.9a | 22.9b | |
| 5–9 | 256 | 28.9a | 19.8b | 9.2c | |
| 10–12 | 330 | 31.2a | 28a,b | 19.3b | |
| > 12 | 470 | 32.9a | 43.3b | 48.6b | |
| Single | 549 | 61.1a | 40.4b | 33.0b | |
| Married/Tog. | 586 | 37.2a | 56.5b | 56.9b | |
| Div./widowed | 39 | 1.7a | 3.2a | 10.1b | |
| Active | 901 | 80.8a | 78.7a | 72.2a | |
| Student | 157 | 15a | 13.3a | 12a | |
| Pensioner, jobless | 85 | 4.1a | 8b | 15.7c | |
| North | 490 | 43.7a | 42.8a | 40.2a | |
| Centre | 426 | 30.2a | 40.0a | 45.8a | |
| Interior | 77 | 9.3a | 5.1b | 7.5a,b | |
| South | 123 | 15.2a | 8.9b | 5.6b | |
| Islands | 28 | 1.6a | 3.2a | .9a | |
| Civilian | 814 | 54.6a | 74.6b | 89.9c | |
| Military | 361 | 45.4a | 25.4b | 10.1c | |
Note. Group demographics sharing the same letter in lines (a, b, c) do not differ significantly.
p ≤ .001.
p ≤ .01.
Risk for revictimization and PTSD diagnosis associated with moderate or severe exposure to child maltreatment (N = 1,200).
| EA | EN | PA | PN | SA | CM | %PTSD | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTSD % | 31.6 | 14.3 | 25.6 | 15.2 | 25 | 20.5 | ||
| OR | ||||||||
| PTSD | 109 | 5.1[2.5, 10.3] | 1.8[1.0, 3.0] | 3.7[1.7, 7.8] | 1.9[1.1, 3.3] | 3.5[1.4, 8.4] | 3.3[2.1, 5.2] | |
| Revictimization | 789 | 2.4[1.2, 6.9] | 1.7[1.1, 2.5] | 4.7[1.7, 13.4] | 1.8[1.2, 2.7] | 2.2[1.5, 3.3] | 13.8 | |
| Accident | 408 | 2.2[1.1, 4.2] | 1.7[1.2, 2.5] | 2.6[1.3, 4.9] | 1.5[1.0, 2.2] | 2.4[1.7, 3.3] | 3.4 | |
| Natural Disaster | 109 | 3.1[1.4, 6.9] | 3.7 | |||||
| Violence by known | 219 | 6.7[3.5, 13.0] | 2.7[1.8, 4.1] | 6.3[3.3, 12.1] | 2.3[1.5, 3.5] | 2.5[1.1, 5.6] | 3.2[2.2, 4.5] | 10.5 |
| Violence by stranger | 215 | 3.1[1.6, 6.1] | 1.6[1.0, 2.5] | 3.7[1.9, 2.5] | 1.6[1.0, 2.5] | 1.9[1.3, 2.8] | 1.4 | |
| Sexual assault by known | 6 | 33.1[6.4,169.9] | 15.6[2.7, 88.1] | 11.9[2.1, 65.4] | 33.4 | |||
| Sexual assault by stranger | 8 | 12.5 | ||||||
| Military Combat | 100 | 1.8[1.0, 3.2] | 3.5[1.6, 7.6] | 5.2[3.3, 8.3] | 2.1[1.3, 3.4] | 22 | ||
| Forced sex as minor | 17 | 10.4[3.2, 33.5] | 21[3.2, 33.5] | 4.2[1.5, 11.2] | 5.9 | |||
| Imprisonment | 35 | 4.1[1.4, 12.4] | 5.7 | |||||
| Torture | 11 | 12[3.0, 47.1] | 6.9[2.1, 23.1] | 7.2[2.1, 23.8] | 18.2 | |||
| Life-threatening illness | 476 | 9 | ||||||
| Other | 102 | 2.3[1.3, 3.8] | 3.8[1.5, 9.1] | 2.3[1.4, 3.6] | 8.8 | |||
Note. Odds ratios are all significant for p ≤ .05. EA–emotional abuse, EN–emotional neglect, PA–physical abuse, PN–physical neglect, SA–Sexual abuse, CM–total score of child maltreatment, n–number of subjects exposed to TEs.
Revictimization predicted by demographics and child maltreatment (N = 1,200).
| Predictors | OR | 95% CI | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.01 | .010 | 0.46 | 0.01 | [0.01, 0.46] | |
| § | 5.57 | ||||
| Four or less | −0.41 | .28 | 2.16 | 0.66 | [0.38, 1.15] |
| Between 5 and 9 | −0.37 | .19 | 3.54 | 0.69 | [0.47, 1.02] |
| Ten or more | −0.05 | .17 | 0.10 | 0.94 | [0.66, 1.34] |
| §§ | 4.17 | ||||
| Single | −0.85 | .47 | 3.23 | 0.43 | [0.17, 1.08] |
| Married/liv. Together | −0.46 | .43 | 1.15 | 0.62 | [0.27, 1.47] |
| §§§Type of job - civilian | 0.52 | .19 | 7.48 | 1.69 | [1.16, 2.45] |
| EA | 0.09 | .04 | 5.39 | 1.10 | [1.01, 1.19] |
| EN | −0.03 | .02 | 1.75 | 0.97 | [0.93, 1.01] |
| PN | 0.14 | .03 | 13.37 | 1.15 | [1.07, 1.24] |
| PA | 0.10 | .06 | 3.05 | 1.11 | [0.99, 1.26] |
| SA | −0.02 | .08 | 0.10 | 0.97 | [0.83, 1.14] |
| Constant | −0.79 | .76 | 1.09 | 0.45 | |
Note. Model confirmed by Hosmer and Lemeshow test χ =6.97, with p = .540, with Nagelkerke's R2=.13.
Reference category for §Education - higher education;§§Marital status–widowed/divorced;§§§Type of job–military.
p ≤ .05.
p ≤ .01.
p ≤ .001.
Logistic regression predicting PTSD diagnosis by demographics, child maltreatment and number of traumatic events (N = 1,200).
| Predictors | B | SE | Wald | OR | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.01 | .01 | 1.67 | 1.01 | [0.99, 1.03] | |
| § | 7.32 | ||||
| Four years or less | 0.60 | .36 | 2.79 | 1.84 | [0.90, 3.75] |
| Between 5 and 9 | −0.61 | .40 | 2.28 | 0.54 | [0.24, 1.20] |
| Ten or more years | −0.24 | .30 | 0.67 | 0.78 | [0.43, 1.41] |
| §§ | 8.41 | ||||
| Single | −0.51 | .54 | 0.89 | 0.59 | [0.20, 1.75] |
| Married/liv. Together | −1.15 | .44 | 6.83 | 0.31 | [0.13, 0.75] |
| §§§Type of job–civilian | 0.86 | .40 | 4.64 | 2.39 | [1.08, 5.26] |
| EA | 0.18 | .05 | 12.98 | 1.21 | [1.09, 1.34] |
| EN | −0.04 | .03 | 1.27 | 0.96 | [0.89, 1.03] |
| PN | 0.04 | .05 | 0.79 | 1.05 | [0.95, 1.15] |
| PA | −0.01 | .07 | 0.07 | 0.98 | [0.85, 1.13] |
| SA | 0.11 | .10 | 1.27 | 1.12 | [0.92, 1.36] |
| Nr traumatic events | 0.40 | .06 | 35.82 | 1.50 | [1.31, 1.71] |
| Constant | −5.19 | .97 | 28.21 | 0.01 | |
Note. Model confirmed by Hosmer and Lemeshow test χ≣8.34, with p = .401, Nagelkerke's R2=.24.
Reference category for §Education-higher education;§§Marital status–widowed/divorced;§§§Type of job–military.
p ≤ .05;
p ≤.01;
p ≤.001.
Results of hierarchical regression predicting PTSD severity by demographics, child maltreatment and traumatic exposure (N = 753).
| Variables | β | SE | R | R2 Adj | ΔR2 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | Demographics | .33 | .10 | .11 | ||
| Age | 0.10 | .03 | ||||
| Marital Status | 0.05 | .91 | ||||
| Education | −0.19 | .36 | ||||
| Civilian/military | −0.16 | .98 | ||||
| Step 2 | Child Maltreatment | .45 | .19 | .09 | ||
| Age | 0.09 | .03 | ||||
| Marital Status | 0.06 | .87 | ||||
| Education | −0.16 | .36 | ||||
| Civilian/military | −0.11 | .94 | ||||
| EA | 0.28 | .17 | ||||
| EN | −0.09 | .11 | ||||
| PN | 0.16*** | .16 | ||||
| PA | −0.02 | .22 | ||||
| SA | 0.05 | .36 | ||||
| Step 3 | Traumatic exposure | .49 | .22 | .03 | ||
| Age | 0.07 | .03 | ||||
| Marital Status | 0.05 | .86 | ||||
| Education | −0.16 | .35 | ||||
| Civilian/military | −0.11 | .92 | ||||
| EA | 0.24 | .16 | ||||
| EN | −0.08 | .11 | ||||
| PN | 0.15 | .16 | ||||
| PA | −0.04 | .21 | ||||
| SA | 0.03 | .36 | ||||
| Nr traumatic events | 0.20 | .24 | ||||
Note. SE: Standard error.
p<.05.
p < 01.
p<.00. All steps significantly predicted PTSD severity: Step 1–F (4, 756) = 22.68, p < .001; Step 2–F (5, 751) = 17.90, p < .001; Step 3–F (1, 750) = 33.4, p < .001.