Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 43, Issue 1 , Pages 49-55, January 2002

The impact of torture on post-traumatic stress symptoms in war-affected Tamil refugees and immigrants

From the School of Psychiatry, Psychiatry Research and Teaching Unit, University of New South Wales, Liverpool, Australia; and the Centre for Young People's Mental Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

Abstract 

The present study examines the effect of torture in generating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms by comparing its impact with that of other traumas suffered by a war-affected sample of Tamils living in Australia. Traumatic predictors of PTSD were examined among a subsample of 107 Tamils (refugees, asylum seekers, and voluntary immigrants) who had endorsed at least one trauma category on the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire. Principal components analysis (PCA) yielded five trauma factors that were applied to predicting PTSD scores. Tamils exposed to torture returned statistically higher PTSD scores than other war trauma survivors after controlling for overall levels of trauma exposure. The torture factor identified by the PCA was found to be the main predictor of PTSD in a multiple regression analysis. Although limited by sampling constraints and retrospective measurement, the present study provides support for the identification of torture as a particularly traumatic event, even when the impact of other war-related trauma is taken into account.

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 Supported by a grant from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council.

PII: S0010-440X(02)38895-3

doi:10.1053/comp.2002.29843

Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 43, Issue 1 , Pages 49-55, January 2002