
@article{ref1,
title="The assessment of mobbing damage: when the psychological pain becomes physical",
journal="Journal of forensic science and criminology",
year="2019",
author="Galletta, Diana and Confuorto, M. and Improta, G. and Marcelli, V.",
volume="7",
number="1",
pages="1-4",
abstract="Mobbing was defined by Leymann &quot;a form of psychological terrorism that implies an unostentatious and unethical attitude in a systematic form by one or more subjects, usually towards a single individual who, because of this persecution, finds himself in a defenceless condition and becomes object of continuous vexatious and persecutory activities that recur with a systematic frequency and over a period of time that is not short, causing considerable mental, psychosomatic and social suffering&quot; (Leymann, 1988) [1].   DSM-5 has underlined the correlation between mobbing and psychopathology. Post-traumatic stress disorder is frequently associated to a mobbing condition. Mobbing relates also to physical symptoms. In this study we present the case of a man who covered an important job position who was victim of mobbing. This man developed a serious anxious depressive symptomatology complicated by several physical damages such as arterial hypertension and a neurosensory acoustic deficit- sudden deafness- with the presence of subjective tinnitus. The subject received a psychological assessment including MMPI-2, Rorschach test and rating scales (SAS, SDS, HAM-D, HAM-A, STAI, DTS, Q-LES-Q) for the personality and symptomatology evaluation.   Finally, it was made a diagnosis of Post-traumatic stress disorder due to mobbing and associated to neurosensory hypoacusis with subjective tinnitus. Further researches should propose guidelines to prevent mobbing and improve working climate.   Keywords: Mobbing; Ptsd; Hypoacusis; Tinnitus; Psychological Assessment<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="2348-9804",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}