Refugee Trauma versus Torture Trauma: A Retrospective Controlled Cohort Study of Tibetan Refugees
- 1 January 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Nervous & Mental Disease
- Vol. 186 (1), 24-34
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005053-199801000-00005
Abstract
A retrospective cohort study of 35 refugee Tibetan nuns and lay students who were arrested and tortured in Tibet matched with 35 controls who were not arrested or tortured was carried out in India. Subjects were administered the Hopkins Checklist-25, evaluating anxiety symptoms, affective disturbances, somatic complaints, and social impairment. The prevalence of symptom scores in the clinical range for both cohorts was 41.4% for anxiety symptoms and 14.3% for depressive symptoms. The torture survivors had a statistically significant higher proportion of elevated anxiety scores than did the nontortured cohort(54.3% vs. 28.6%, p =.05). This was not true for elevated depressive scores. The results suggest that torture has long-term consequences on mental health over and above the effects of being uprooted, fleeing one's country, and living in exile as a refugee, though the additional effects were small. Political commitment, social support in exile, and prior knowledge of and preparedness for confinement and torture in the imprisoned cohort served to foster resilience against psychological sequelae. The contribution of Buddhist spirituality plays an active role in the development of protective coping mechanisms among Tibetan refugees.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Burmese political dissidents in Thailand: trauma and survival among young adults in exile.American Journal of Public Health, 1996
- Psychological responses to war and atrocity: The limitations of current conceptsSocial Science & Medicine, 1995
- Factors related to long-term traumatic stress responses in survivors of torture in TurkeyPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1994
- Psychological effects of torture: a comparison of tortured with nontortured political activists in TurkeyAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1994
- Strategies for assessing the potential for positive adjustment following traumaJournal of Traumatic Stress, 1991
- The role of self-understanding in resilient individuals: The development of a perspective.American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1989
- Physical and psychological sequelae to torture. A controlled clinical study of exiled asylum applicantsForensic Science International, 1988
- The physical and psychological sequelae of torture. Symptomatology and diagnosisJAMA, 1988
- Sequelae to torture. A controlled study of torture victims living in exileForensic Science International, 1988
- Commitment and endurance: Common themes in the life histories of civil rights workers who stayed.American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, 1983