| Literature DB >> 36011945 |
Kleio Koutra1, Courtney Burns2, Laura Sinko3, Sachiko Kita4, Hülya Bilgin5, Denise Saint Arnault6.
Abstract
Research is beginning to examine gender-based violence (GBV) survivors' recovery, but little is known about diverse recovery trajectories or their relationships with other distress and recovery variables. This interdisciplinary, international multisite mixed-method study developed and used the TRR to identify and classify survivors' trauma pathways. This study describes the phases of the initial development of the preliminary TRR (Phase 1), refines and calibrates the TRR (Phase 2), and then integrates the TRR into quantitative data from four countries (Phase 3). Seven recovery pathways with six domains emerged: normalizing, minimizing, consumed/trapped; shutdown or frozen, surviving, seeking and fighting for integration; finding integration/equanimity. Depression scores were related to most recovery domains, and TRR scores had large effect sizes. At the same time, PTSD was not statistically related to TRR scores, but TRR had a medium effect size. Our study found that the TRR can be implemented in diverse cultural settings and promises a reliable cross-cultural tool. The TRR is a survivor-centered, trauma-informed way to understand different survivorship pathways and how different pathways impact health outcomes. Overall, this rubric provides a foundation for future study on differences in survivor healing and the drivers of these differences. This tool can potentially improve survivor care delivery and our understanding of how to meet best the needs of the survivor populations we intend to serve.Entities:
Keywords: mixed method; recovery; rubric; trauma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36011945 PMCID: PMC9408383 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph191610310
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Summary of rubric refinements.
| Analysis Round | Major Discovery | Change Made to the Rubric |
|---|---|---|
| 1 and 2 | Definitions of “consumed” and “surviving/overwhelmed” were similar | The consumed pathway survivors struggled with the frustration of recovery; surviving pathway struggled with frustrations with navigating the challenges of daily life. |
| Descriptions of “cut off/frozen” and “minimizing” were similar | Minimizing pathway trauma history was not relevant in the lives; cut off/frozen pathway sense of feeling stuck. | |
| 3 | The philosophy and purpose of the rubric itself were unclear | Focus is on trauma only, not all of life’s adversities; assess how the survivor understands trauma in the fabric of her life and selfhood. |
| Need to “bracket” psychiatric labels | Focus is on the survivors’ perceptions, not a diagnosis; removed any pathologizing phrases. | |
| 4 | Social network engagement embedded in other domains | Made a new domain called “engaging with a supportive social network” which includes trust and mistrust, self-disclosure, social support, and interpersonal boundaries. |
| 5 | Needed to distinguish between “struggling to become integrated” and achieving “integration” | Service use, social support, or managing symptoms are necessary steps toward integration, but integration includes self-acceptance, a feeling of peace, and equanimity. |
Quotes from the narrative rating analysis.
| Main | Pathways Quotes | Pathways |
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| She seems to engage in self-blame and is desensitized to repeated unwanted sexual experiences, saying “I am kind of used to it… I see trends happening, and I see how boys think… I should have been more careful.” She still feels shame, embarrassment, and resentment, but also has accepted/resigned to her experiences. She feels helpless and abandoned, saying that she can’t talk to her friends about her unwanted experiences because “if you tell your friends, they are going to be like ‘if this is a pattern that you see, why don’t you just stop?’” She talks about feeling sad, blue, gloomy, distressed, and more, and expresses “I don’t know how to feel, and I don’t know the appropriate response as to what happened.” She hasn’t really engaged in any formal healing methods, saying that her primary method is to try to “brush it off”, but that she generally isn’t sure where she should go from here, and that she “isn’t really one to talk about her feelings”. | These people do not believe that the survivorship concept applies to them because what happened is normal. However, they sometimes focus on the social fallout that can occur if you were to name it and believe the will (or even should) be blamed. | |
| She says she isn’t close enough with any of her friends to talk with them about her feelings if she is having a hard time, and she states that she struggles to identify any causes of the strong emotions that she feels. She is very disconnected from her abuse history, saying, “It was right before I left for college. I blot it out of my memory, so I didn’t even think to write it on [lifeline], because I completely push it out.” “I have been totally ignoring it, and I almost don’t even want to open that box, because if I do then it will become real, and I will actually have to deal with it.” | These survivors want to push the trauma out of their minds and lives and describe being unable to deal with it. | |
| She strongly refused to see and talk about the impacts of trauma on her life, functioning, and physical and psychological health, although she knew the severe trauma happened in her life. In addition, she drew so many social networks around her; however, nobody was truly connected with her (very superficial and she did not talk about her suffering with anybody including her family). She tried to keep functioning in daily life by denying and rejecting to face the trauma. | ||
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| She has a very long history of assault and abuse going all the way back to high school. She elaborates so extensively about these continued experiences that she seems very consumed by them, and it has seeped into her professional life as well. She says that she still feels abandoned, helpless, hostile, anxious, and angry. She also says being a survivor is “a really big part” of her identity. | These survivors tend to describe survivorship as central to their identity and cannot see life without symptoms and struggles to heal. | |
| She is really, really struggling. She describes herself as being “very consumed by her feelings from her trauma.” She feels she has not progressed very far along the healing journey and feels like she is a failure like she has “amounted to nothing”. She cannot see a future where she has healed. | ||
| Trauma is the center of her identity. She seemed to live in trauma and be controlled by trauma effects. She always recognized her all physical and psychological distress, or a little stress in daily life was caused by her trauma in past. Although she tried to seek help from many people and connect with them, she believes nobody understands her. | ||
| She seemed to think she is different from other people, and nobody can understand her. She was always focusing on her trauma and its impacts. She seemed to be living with her trauma in a very deep hole inside her that nobody can’t reach. | ||
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| She does well in school and goes to parties and things on the weekends but feels very disconnected from her social network. She has had a series of unwanted sexual experiences that she feels like are in a gray area of being unwanted, but that they made her feel uncomfortable. She feels caught in a pattern of dating/hooking up with guys and is having trouble breaking out of a pattern that she knows is clearly harmful to her. She talks about sadness, loneliness, despair, and feeling like she can’t move on. | These survivors tend to focus on feeling paralysis, being stuck, and feeling disconnected from themselves and others. | |
| She hasn’t talked about her trauma before this interview and says that it affects her life now in terms of hypervigilance, and that she isn’t very open with the people in her life. She says, “I still want to vomit sometimes when I think about it”, but seems very disconnected and numb from the experience, even saying “I just don’t care.” | ||
| This participant is struggling a lot and “I have been feeling broken”). She feels disconnected from others and is struggling with whether or not to seek help. She says, “It feels like nobody is there for me” and “I am not important in everybody else’s life, for them to ask me what is going on… I feel withdrawn… abandoned…” She also says that she is “scared that this is how [life] is going to be… immobilized…” | ||
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| She is focused on her economic problems and the problems in her and her family’s life. She does not connect these with traumatic events or trauma effects. | These survivors are generally exhausted, angry, feel betrayed by others, and are frustrated in their daily lives. They tend to have overwhelming problems, which are sometimes symptoms but usually life experiences. | |
| She feels a lot of anxiety and depression on a regular basis and holds a lot of tension in her body and exhibits a lot of physical symptoms. She has seen various social workers, therapists, and psychiatrists, but still experiences anxiety/depression daily. After the violence she experienced, she was not supported by the few people that she told. | ||
| She was very struggling and surviving in several and serious problems among her two children, such as violence against her and suicide attempts as the impact of trauma on them. She was also struggling from several physical and emotional distress because of being exhausted by the present problems. Although she had such significant social, physical and psychological problems, she try to cope the problems by connecting with trustful others and believe a hope for resolving the problems and getting her life better in the future. | ||
| She felt very overwhelmed and unable to control her symptoms in her daily life and health, including feelings of dissociation. She described struggling and surviving day-by-day. She did not try to have a close relationship with anybody because of a fear that she did not want to be hurt anymore and the belief that nobody understands her. | ||
| She felt strong frustrations, anger, and irritation with isolation and prejudice against a single mother and victim of IPV in the community she was living. She did not have self-confidence and strongly wants to be accepted by other people. She expressed she was surviving in such situations and had several emotional and body distress at present. | ||
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| She has great self-esteem, is well organised, and feels positive for her future. Still, she questions why she feels so vulnerable. She feels that it is ok to be vulnerable but wants to get over it and move on. | These survivors have significant improvements in many aspects of their lives but are still struggling with symptoms or difficulties. They emphasize a degree or mastery which gives them hope that they will achieve the healing they seek. | |
| She has a rich social network and a very healthy relationship with her fiancé. However, she experiences a lot of somatic symptoms, including pain. She describes her mental status very eloquently, stating, “I feel like I constantly have a storm in my mind. You know, sometimes it is just cloudy overcast, and sometimes it is a thunderstorm of both worry and stress, and just kind of anxiety overall. She is still feeling “withdrawn from who she is”, and a lot of spiraling anxiety, fatigue, and more. However, she acknowledges that this is a significant improvement from what she used to be like, saying that these negative feelings don’t overwhelm her to the degree that they used to. | ||
| I found this participant to be very well-spoken and reflective about her experience in an abusive relationship during college. She recognizes some long-lasting effects of her abusive relationship, saying that it somewhat affected all of her subsequent relationships with a heightened sense of vulnerability. While she has moved on, she admits that she ‘still kind of struggles sometimes’ with feelings of guilt, shame, and anger, but is doing very well overall. | ||
| Although she was struggling with several physical symptoms due to her trauma, she tried to understand why she has such symptoms and the connection with her trauma. In addition, she really appreciated for people around her who helped her out, such as her child, parents, peers, and friends, and could feel a deep connection between herself and others. She also felt the trauma was her past thing, and she want to move forward living with trauma. | ||
| She was beginning to recognize the importance of paying her attention to her emotions and body. She was still fragile and felt fear to connect with others, especially others who threatened her such as her mother who always dominated her, however, she was building up a sense of trust and hope with others throughout having a relationship with peers. | ||
| She still felt a difficulty of developing boundaries in the relationship with persons who threaten her and did not feel connections and integration between body, emotions, bad parts and good parts in her life, and trauma well. However, she was exploring to integrate those and trying to cope the difficulty in her relationship with others. She has hope that she can finally develop the ability to manage and cope and have a better life. | ||
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| Her relationship with the people in her social network “is on a new level” and very positive because of her sharing with them about her experiences. She also exercises and engages in arts and crafts and is successfully studying mental health counseling. “There is a Hemingway quote that I really like. ‘The world breaks us all but some of us are stronger in the broken places’”. She reflects on healing saying it involves “realizing that I probably will get hurt again, probably in different ways, but that I can come back from it, that I am resilient.” | These survivors have a sense of calm, positivity, and security in their healing. They tend to emphasize their connection with themselves as well as with others. | |
| She has healthy coping strategies (yoga, cooking, talking with friends) and has a healthy relationship with her boyfriend. Her friends were also very supportive of her after these situations, and she said that helped her get over feelings of shame and self-blame for being in those situations in the first place. | ||
| She seemed very calm and easy during talking about her story and present condition. She strongly felt that her children and co-workers helped her out from the very dark phase of her life and deeply appreciated for them. She did not report serious physical and emotional symptoms and she said she can believe herself who could overcome such struggling phase and trauma. | ||
| She understood and could explain the connections between her emotion, body, and trauma. In addition, she felt the deeply connected with trusted others, such as her children, parents, and peers and those people healed herself with trauma. She expressed the trauma as a traffic accident in the past (indicating trauma was outside herself at present). She seemed very calm, positive, and active. She also said she loves herself and people surrounding her. |
Sample characteristics GBV survivors (N = 71) and pathway of trauma recovery per country.
| Variable | Japan (N = 23) | Turkey (N = 12) | Greece (N = 14) | USA (N = 22) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M (SD) | |||||
| Age | 46.5 (6.3) | 31.7 (5.9) | 42.5 (14.4) | 22.1 (2.3) | |
| PHQ8 | 9.1 (7.3) | 8.8 (4.3) | 8.1 (5.3) | 7.3 (5.8) | |
| PCL5 | 28.0 (20.3) | 44.3 (13.3) | 22.2 (13.8) | 22.2 (17.2) | |
| SOC | 43.8 (14.7) | 49.9 (9.7) | 53.6 (13.2) | 52.1 (14.9) | |
| Current medical diagnosis | 81% | 66% | 50% | 66% | |
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| Normalizing | --- | --- | --- | --- | |
| Minimizing | --- | --- | --- | --- | |
| Consumed | 4 | --- | 1 | 2 | 9.9% |
| Shutdown | --- | 1 | 3 | 4 | 11.3% |
| Surviving | 2 | 4 | 5 | 1 | 16.9% |
| Fighting for integration | 6 | 2 | 2 | 6 | 22.5% |
| Finding equanimity | 11 | 5 | 3 | 9 | 39.4% |
Independent sample t-tests of mean TRR sum and domain score by depression and PTSD subgroup.
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| TRR sum scores | 35.0 (7.7) | 29.6 (8.7) | 0.00 | ---- | ---- | ---- |
| Trauma definition | 5.9 (1.4) | 4.8 (1.6) | 0.01 | |||
| Balancing emotions, body, cognition, and behavior | 5.8 (1.4) | 4.9 (1.5) | 0.02 | ---- | ---- | ---- |
| Acceptance of trauma impact | 5.7 (1.5) | 4.8 (1.6) | 0.03 | ---- | ---- | ---- |
| Holistic self-view | 6.0 (1.3) | 4.9 (1.5) | 0.00 | ---- | ---- | ---- |
| Autonomous, empowered functioning | 5.9 (1.3) | 5.1 (1.5) | 0.01 | ---- | ---- | ---- |
| Engagement in a supportive social network | 5.8 (1.6) | 5.0 (1.6) | 0.04 | ---- | ---- | ---- |
Figure 1Recovery group’s means: (a) depression; (b) PTSD; (c) SOC scores.