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CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE AND PSYCHOBIOLOGY: MALNURTURE AND NATURE INTERACTING

NCJ Number
144840
Journal
Journal of Child Sexual Abuse Volume: 1 Issue: 2 Dated: (1992) Pages: 105- 107
Author(s)
D L Corwin
Date Published
1992
Length
3 pages
Annotation
The trauma model of psychopathology may be applicable to childhood sexual abuse, but further empirical research is needed to test its validity in establishing definitive links between psychological and biological effects in sexually abused children.
Abstract
Severe childhood trauma appears to play an important role in the development of various psychiatric syndromes. Multiple personality disorders, somatization, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorders appear to be strongly associated with previous trauma, such as childhood sexual abuse. In other disorders, such as affective disorders, attention deficit hyperactivity, and substance abuse, genetic and biological factors, psychosocial forces, and previous trauma appear to interact with varying primacy from case to case. The precise etiology of most emotional and behavioral dysfunction is probably not either trauma or biological predilection alone, but rather determined by the interaction of these and other factors. Studies that include psychophysiological, biological, and psychosocial instrumentation offer the greatest potential for increasing knowledge about factors contributing to psychiatric dysfunction.