Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 44, Issue 1 , Pages 65-69, January 2003

Dissociative symptoms and amnesia in Dutch concentration camp survivors

From the Department of Experimental Psychology and the Faculty of Law, University of Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Abstract 

We examined to what extent dissociative phenomena in concentration camp survivors are related to post-traumatic stress symptoms. Self-reports of amnesia for traumatic war events and other dissociative experiences were studied in a sample of 31 Dutch survivors of World War II (WWII) Japanese concentration camps. Seventeen survivors treated for war-related psychiatric symptoms were compared to 14 concentration camp survivors who had no psychiatric diagnosis. Although survivors who received treatment scored significantly higher on the Impact of Event Scale and the Post-Traumatic Symptom Scale than control survivors, the two groups did not differ in terms of accessibility of war memories or dissociative experiences. Levels of post-traumatic stress symptoms were not significantly correlated with dissociative experiences. In both groups, reports of psychogenic amnesia for traumatic events were rare. Our results support previous studies demonstrating that post-traumatic stress symptoms are not necessarily accompanied by dissociative experiences. They also contradict the suggestion that amnesia is a common phenomenon in people who have been exposed to war atrocities.

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 Supported by a grant from the Dutch Council for Scientific Research (N.W.O. 575-29-001) awarded to H.M.

PII: S0010-440X(03)00031-2

doi:10.1053/comp.2003.50011

Comprehensive Psychiatry
Volume 44, Issue 1 , Pages 65-69, January 2003