Symptoms of Distress and Posttraumatic Stress among South African Former Political Detainees
Author: Kagee, Ashraf
Source: Ethnicity and Health, Volume 10, Number 2, May 2005 , pp. 169-179(11)
Abstract:
Considerable debate has centred on the question of traumatisation among individuals who have survived human rights violations in societies that have undergone political conflict. In order to gain an estimate of the extent of long-term traumatisation among political activists who experienced torture and abuse in detention during the apartheid era in South Africa, a sample of 148 survivors of such experiences were recruited in a cross-sectional study and asked to complete the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL), the Impact of Event Scale (IES), and the Trauma Symptoms section of the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ). The proportions of the sample that scored above the clinical cut-points on these measures were calculated. On the HSCL, 14.19% of the sample scored above the cut-point for clinical significance of 44; on the IES, 17.57% scored above the clinical cut-point of 44; and on the HTQ, 37.83% scored above the cut-point of 75. Moreover, the sample's mean scores were significantly higher than the cut-point for clinically significant distress on the HSCL (p<0.001); significantly lower than the cut-point for severe traumatisation on the IES (p<0.001); and non-significantly lower than the cut-point for clinically significant traumatisation on the HTQ (p=0.074). These results are considered in terms of current theoretical debates on the relevance and applicability of posttraumatic stress disorder as a circumscribed nosological entity in developing countries that are in the process of coming to terms with a history of political conflict.Keywords: PTSD; Political Detainers; South Africa
Document Type: Research article
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13557850500071244
Publication date: 2005-05-01
- In this: publication
- By this: publisher
- In this Subject: Medicine (General) , Anthropology & Archeology
- By this author: Kagee, Ashraf

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