Author:
COHEN PATRICIA,BROWN JOCELYN,SMAILES ELIZABETH
Abstract
Child abuse and neglect have repeatedly been shown to be risks for psychiatric and personality
disorders. However, much of this evidence is based on retrospective reports of adults. In addition,
little is known about the developmental course of psychopathology among those exposed to child
maltreatment. In this study, we report mental disorders assessed from early childhood to
adulthood in those later identified as victims of abuse or neglect by official or self-report. Findings
show elevated rates of mental disorders and symptoms in each of four groups relative to the
normative sample. Groups included those who had been victims of physical abuse or neglect
according to official report and those who had been victims of physical or sexual abuse by
self-report. As expected, the maltreated groups were quite different demographically from the
community comparison sample, especially those with official reports. The group with
retrospective self-reports of physical abuse differed only modestly from the comparison group on
the symptom and disorder measures, while the sexually abused group showed the most
consistently elevated patterns, even after controls for demographic differences were taken into
account. The disorder and symptom patterns differed both by group and by age: neglect cases
showed a partial remission in adulthood, while official physical abuse cases showed an
increasingly consolidated pattern of antisocial and impulsive behavior.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
224 articles.
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