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This study examines the long-term effects of untreated childhood trauma on personality development by analyzing the MMPI-2 results of former deportees. Differences in psychopathological symptoms based on the age trauma was experienced are explored, highlighting the lasting impact of early trauma on personality development. The study population includes political prisoners and individuals traumatized in young adulthood or as children. The study reveals statistically significant differences in clinical scales between groups, shedding light on the enduring consequences of childhood trauma.
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Long term effects of untreated childhood trauma in the group offormer deportees. Results of MMPI-2 Krzysztof Rutkowski Edyta Dembińska Department of Psychotherapy, Jagiellonian University Medical College
Introduction • The hypothesis that of the impact of traumatic experiences in early childhood impact on personality the formation of the personality and its psychopathology is well known and considered treated as relatively obvious in psychology and psychiatry. In spite of the widespread acknowledgement of its veracity, the impact is in methodological terms it is extremely difficult to verify statistically in methodological terms.
Researchdifficulties • the homogeneous stressors that operated in the patient’s childhood, • the years of their youth, • and throughout their adult life without therapeutic input, • as well as and the possibility of evaluating clinical symptoms.
Aim of study • The aim of this study was to establish the influence of the time when trauma is experienced of experience of the trauma on the development of psychopathological symptoms.
Hypothesis • Trauma experienced in the early stages of a child’s development may cause enduring personality disorders, even when where it is not experienced with full awareness.
The study population Two sub-groups: • those exposed to trauma before below the age of five (group 1), • those who suffered trauma at a later age (group 2).
The study population • The study group comprised 327 people persecuted for political reasons in Poland in the years 1939–1968, who voluntarily reported for diagnosis and out-patient psychiatric and internal medical treatment. • The average age was 68 (med. 68, min. 44, max 88) during the examination, group 1: 62,9 y.o. average, group 2: 71,2 y.o. average. The statistical significant difference in age (p= 0.0000) is directly due to distinction between groups – the age of five.
The study population • Trauma duration is almost similar in both groups (group 1- 4,9 years, group 2 – 4,3 years). Although the differences are statistically significant (p=0.0283), it is highly unlikely to assume that such prolonged traumas can be clinically different due to time of duration. • The disproportion in gender (group 1: 45,38% males, 54,62% females, group 2: 65,48% males, 34,52% females, p=0.0003) is due to distinction between groups, the children have been persecuted with no association with the gender, but veterans and political prisoners are represented mostly by men.
Traumas • Politicalprisoners (mostly trauamtised in young adulthood during the imprisonment by Polish authorities in Polish prisons due to anticommunist activity) (82 people), • Peopledeported and incarcerated in the Gulag in Siberia by the Soviet authorities (traumatised in all ages/any age and sent as adults or children to labour camps in Russia only due to Polish nationality, as equivalent of ethnic cleansing) (204 people), • Formerprisoners of Nazi concentration camps (traumatised in all ages/any age and sent as adults or children to concentration camps only due to Polish nationality, as equivalent of ethnic cleansing) (27 people), • Warveterans or former POWs (trauamtised as young adults during fighting or inprisonmet in Geramn POW camps) (67 people). • Some of the subjects had experienced more than one of these of the above types of traumas. The structure of the study group well described the various political and war traumas.
Procedures • Psychiatricexamination consisting of comprising an in-depth consultation, assessment of the subject’s medical and legal documents, and a description of their the subject’s current mental state. • Psychologicalexamination was conducted using the MMPI-2 questionnaire. Other psychological tests were performed as indicated, such as e.g. the Wechsler Intelligence Scale, the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE), or the Clock Drawing Test, in order to refine the diagnostic procedure and exclude people with cognitive disorders from the study group. • The dementive symptoms or other significant organic damage of CNS or exposition to any other trauama (i.e. accident) or any psychiatric treatment were exclusion criterion.
Results • Note. an = 74, bn = 42, • L – Lie, • F – Infrequency, • K – Correction, • Hs –Hypochondrsiasis, • D – Depression, • Hs – Hysteria, • Pd– Psychopathic deviate, • Mf – Masculinity/Fenimity, • Pa – Paranoia, • Pt – Psychasthenia, • Sc– Schizophrenia, • Ma – Hypomania, • Si – Social introverion
Results • Differences between the groups were found for the F validity scale (p=0.0201) and these clinical scales: Depression (D) (p=0.0235), Psychopathic deviate (Pd) (p=0.0035), Psychasthenia(Pt) (p=0.0079), Schizophrenia (Sc) (p=0.0027), and Social introversion (Si) (p=0.0022). • These differences were statistically significant. The Mann-Whitney U-test also pointed to the Hypochondriasis scale (Hs, p=0.0437).
Conclusion 1/2 • Despite these limitations, the outcomes of the research confirmed in statistical terms that non-remembered trauma experienced in early childhood distorts personality development. • From a clinical perspective, the high scores on the Psychopathic Deviate, Psychasthenia, Schizophrenia, and Social Introversion scales are mutually cohesive, and taken together, these symptoms lead to withdrawal and hindrance of social functioning. • Particularly telling are the differences on the Psychopathic Deviate scale that indicated pathology only in the early childhood trauma group, while people exposed to trauma after age five showed no signs of enduring functional disorders that might be defined as psychopathic.
Conclusion 2/2 • Moreover, this finding confirmed the positive verification of the research hypothesis and indicates a reaction to the trauma, enduring development of pathological symptoms, and a maladaptive style of functioning in those exposed to early childhood trauma and not remembering it. • The results may (at least in part) be extrapolated to other groups of trauma sufferers. • At the same time, the results confirmed the impact of unconsciously experienced and non-remembered factors operating in childhood on personality development and the occurrence of pathological symptoms even decades later.