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Prevalence and clinical correlates of dissociative symptoms in people with complex PTSD: Is complex PTSD a dissociative disorder?

Hong Wang Fung, Guangzhe Frank Yuan, Caimeng Liu, Eleanor Sui Sum Lin, Stanley Kam Ki Lam, Janet Yuen Ha Wong

2024Psychiatry Research13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The extent to which complex post-traumatic stress disorder (C-PTSD) can be conceptualized as a dissociative disorder remains an ongoing debate. This study investigated the prevalence and correlates of dissociative symptoms in people with C-PTSD. We analyzed baseline data from an international randomized controlled trial. A total of 165 intervention seekers who met the ICD-11 criteria for C-PTSD completed standardized self-report measures of trauma, C-PTSD symptoms, dissociative symptoms, depressive symptoms, and work and social impairments. In this sample, only 42.3 % of participants exhibited clinically significant dissociative symptoms. Dissociative symptoms had a unique association with depressive symptoms and work and social impairments in our participants with C-PTSD, even after controlling for trauma exposure and C-PTSD symptoms. The data does not support the theory that C-PTSD is a dissociative disorder. However, the findings highlight the importance of recognizing dissociation in people with C-PTSD.

Topics & Concepts

DissociativeDissociative disordersPsychiatryClinical psychologyPosttraumatic stressPsychologyDissociation (chemistry)Physical chemistryChemistryPsychosomatic Disorders and Their TreatmentsTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchGenetic Neurodegenerative Diseases