首页   按字顺浏览 期刊浏览 卷期浏览 The Psychosocial Effects of Torture, Mass Human Rights Violations, and Refugee TraumaTo...
The Psychosocial Effects of Torture, Mass Human Rights Violations, and Refugee TraumaToward an Integrated Conceptual Framework

 

作者: DERRICK SILOVE,  

 

期刊: The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease  (OVID Available online 1999)
卷期: Volume 187, issue 4  

页码: 200-207

 

ISSN:0022-3018

 

年代: 1999

 

出版商: OVID

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

Torture is a complex trauma that often occurs within the context of widespread persecution and human rights violations. In addition, the nature of modern warfare is such that whole populations are at risk of suffering extensive trauma, injustices, loss, and displacement. Refugees, in particular, experience sequential stresses that may compound each other over prolonged periods of time. The present overview examines whether contemporary notions of trauma, and especially a focus on the category of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), are adequate in assessing the multiple effects of such experiences. Recent studies are reviewed to indicate the strengths and limitations of current research approaches. Rates of PTSD in such studies have varied with relatively low rates being found in recent epidemiologic studies undertaken on refugee populations. It is suggested that a focus on intervening psychosocial adaptive systems may assist in delineating more clearly the pathways that determine whether traumatized persons achieve psychosocial restitution or are at risk of ongoing psychiatric disability. A model is proposed which suggests that torture and related abuses may challenge five core adaptive systems subserving the functions of "safety," "attachment," "justice," "identity-role," and "existential-meaning." It is argued that a clearer delineation of such adaptive systems may provide a point of convergence that may link research endeavors more closely to the subjective experience of survivors and to the types of clinical interventions offered by trauma treatment services.

 



返 回