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Journal Article

Citation

Kamphuis JH, Emmelkamp PMG. Am. J. Psychiatry 2001; 158(5): 795-798.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, American Psychiatric Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The authors examined the nature and prevalence of stalking behaviors, victims' coping responses, and the psychomedical impact of stalking on its victims.
METHOD: Widely accepted self-report measures, including the 12-item General Health Questionnaire and the Impact of Event Scale, were used to assess characteristics of the stalking history and its outcome in terms of general psychomedical distress and posttraumatic stress in a community study group of 201 female stalking victims.
RESULTS: The majority of the victims had undergone multiple forms of harassment, including threats of violence in 74% (N=148) and actual violence in 55% (N=111). More than half of the victims met the criterion for clinically significant pathology on the General Health Questionnaire. Stalking often yielded substantial post-traumatic stress symptoms, commensurate with levels found in other studies of traumatized subjects.
CONCLUSIONS: Support-seeking female stalking victims experience pervasive and persistent threat and intrusion; these experiences lead to high levels of psychological morbidity. (Abstract Adapted from Source: American Journal of Psychiatry, 2001. Copyright © 2001 by American Psychiatric Publishing)

Adult Female
Adult Victim
Female Victim
Stalking Effects
Stalking Incidence and Prevalence
Stalking Victim
Psychological Victimization Effects
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Violence Effects
Victim Coping
Coping Behavior
01-03

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