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Journal Article

Citation

Abram KM, Teplin LA, Charles DR, Longworth SL, McClelland GM, Dulcan MK. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry 2004; 61(4): 403-410.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2004, American Medical Association)

DOI

10.1001/archpsyc.61.4.403

PMID

15066899

PMCID

PMC2861915

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine prevalence estimates of exposure to trauma and 12-month rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among juvenile detainees by demographic subgroups (sex, race/ethnicity, and age). DESIGN: Epidemiologic study of juvenile detainees. Master's level clinical research interviewers administered the PTSD module of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children, version IV (DISC-IV), to randomly selected detainees. SETTING: A large, temporary detention center for juveniles in Cook County, Illinois (which includes Chicago and surrounding suburbs). PARTICIPANTS: Randomly selected, stratified sample of 898 African American, non-Hispanic white, and Hispanic youth (532 males, 366 females, aged 10-18 years) arrested and newly detained. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children, version IV. RESULTS: Most participants (92.5%) had experienced 1 or more traumas (mean, 14.6 incidents; median, 6 incidents). Significantly more males (93.2%) than females (84.0%) reported at least 1 traumatic experience; 11.2% of the sample met criteria for PTSD in the past year. More than half of the participants with PTSD reported witnessing violence as the precipitating trauma. CONCLUSION: Trauma and PTSD seem to be more prevalent among juvenile detainees than in community samples. We recommend directions for research and discuss implications for mental health policy.


Language: en

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