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Published Online: July 1993

Childhood Abuse and Neglect Among Women Outpatients With Chronic Mental Illness

Abstract

Objective: The purposes of the study were to determine the prevalence. of childhood sexual abuse, physical abuse, and neglect among women outpatients with severe and persistent mental illness; to examine patterns of co-occurrence of the various types of abuse; and to explore the relationships between childhood abuse and adult psychiatric symptomatology. Methods: Children histories of abuse and data on clinical characteristics of 78 women enrolled in a New York State outpatient clinic were elicited in face-to-face interviews using a structured questionnaire. Results: Sixty-five percent of the women reported histories of some type of abuse or neglect during childhood. Forty-five percent of the sample had been sexually abused, 51 percent had been physically abused, and 22 percent had experienced neglect. Seventy-four percent of the sexually abused women, 70 percent of the physically abused women, and 94 percent of the women who experienced neglect reported at least one additional form of abuse or neglect. Respondents who had been abused in childhood had higher levels of depressive and psychotic symptoms and higher rates of sexual victimization in adulthood than those who bad not been abused. Women who experienced neglect as children bad higher rates of homelessness in adulthood. Conclusions: Chronic mentally ill women seem to experience higher rates of abuse and more types of abuse than the general population. Clinicians should try to determine whether chronic mentally ill women have histories of abuse and to develop interventions to meet their special needs.

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Go to Psychiatric Services
Go to Psychiatric Services
Psychiatric Services
Pages: 666 - 670

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Published in print: July 1993
Published online: 1 April 2006

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Creedmoor Psychiatric Center in Queens Village, New York; Columbia University in New York City
New York State Psychiatric Institute in New York City; School of Public Health at Columbia University
Creedmoor Psychiatric Center; Columbia University

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