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Journal Article

Citation

Newton TL. J. Trauma Dissociation 2021; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/15299732.2020.1869649

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Peritraumatic emotions are implicated in the elevated health risks associated with interpersonal trauma, but they have not been widely studied in the context of intimate partner abuse (IPA). To address this, community women with divorce histories completed IPA measures, along with an interview to assess posttraumatic stress symptoms and both DSM-IV A2 emotions (yes/no) and other emotions (free response) experienced during worst incidents of IPA. Anxiety/fright, helplessness, and horror were highly prevalent. Lexical analysis of the words women used to describe their other emotions revealed that anger and shame were the most prevalent, followed by dissociation and sadness. As predicted, chronicity of direct assault and frequency of verbal/emotional abuse showed significant, positive correlations with peritraumatic dissociation, and peritraumatic shame showed significant, positive correlations with current symptoms of effortful avoidance. Also, a negative correlation between frequency of dominance/isolation abuse - an indicator of coercive control - and peritraumatic anger approached statistical significance. Although limited by the cross-sectional, retrospective design, results contribute to the understanding of peritraumatic emotions in the context of IPA, and motivate continued efforts to examine their roles in the elevated health risks of interpersonal trauma.


Language: en

Keywords

posttraumatic stress; shame; dissociation; Intimate partner abuse; peritraumatic emotion

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