2013
DOI: 10.1037/a0028118
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Correlates of symptom reduction in treatment-seeking survivors of torture.

Abstract: While a growing body of literature addresses the psychological consequences of torture and war trauma, there are few empirical examinations of treatment for survivors of torture. This study offers a program evaluation of a comprehensive torture treatment program in New York City. We present literature surrounding the interdisciplinary "wraparound" approach to treating survivors of torture, and examine the relationship between clinical services and symptom reduction in a multinational sample of refugees (N ϭ 17… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(32 citation statements)
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“…Primary coding was done by the first author, a clinical psychologist from the U.S. with a decade of research and practice working with refugees, torture survivors, and other survivors of political violence in home countries (Rasmussen, Rosenfeld, et al, 2007), refugee camps (Rasmussen, Katoni, Keller, & Wilkinson, 2011; Rasmussen et al, 2010), and resettlement contexts in the U.S. (Raghavan, Rasmussen, Rosenfeld, & Keller, 2012; Rasmussen, Smith, et al, 2007). A randomly selected 15 CCDs were also coded by the third author, i an Australian clinical psychologist with graduate and postdoctoral experience in posttrauma settings in Southeast Asia and clinical experience with PTSD and complicated grief.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Primary coding was done by the first author, a clinical psychologist from the U.S. with a decade of research and practice working with refugees, torture survivors, and other survivors of political violence in home countries (Rasmussen, Rosenfeld, et al, 2007), refugee camps (Rasmussen, Katoni, Keller, & Wilkinson, 2011; Rasmussen et al, 2010), and resettlement contexts in the U.S. (Raghavan, Rasmussen, Rosenfeld, & Keller, 2012; Rasmussen, Smith, et al, 2007). A randomly selected 15 CCDs were also coded by the third author, i an Australian clinical psychologist with graduate and postdoctoral experience in posttrauma settings in Southeast Asia and clinical experience with PTSD and complicated grief.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Only a small number of studies however directly examined predictors of treatment response in refugees. One demographic variable (male gender; Stenmark et al ., ), one migration‐related variable (lack of refugee status; Raghavan, Rasmussen, Rosenfeld, & Keller, ), two trauma‐related variables (abduction history, Betancourt et al ., ; offender status, Stenmark, Catani, Neuner, Elbert, & Holen, ), one coping variable (lack of a firm belief system; Brune et al ., ), one treatment variable (the number of trauma‐focused treatment sessions; Lambert & Alhassoon, ), and two clinical variables (comorbid depression, Silove, Manicavasagar, Coello, & Aroche, ; poorer pre‐intervention mental health, Van Wyk, Schweitzer, Brough, Vromans, & Murray, ) have been found to predict poor treatment response.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Items were scored on a 4-point Likert scale. The cut-off score of 2.5 was used in accordance with similar studies on refugee populations (Buhmann, 2014;Palic & Elkit, 2009;Raghavan, Rasmussen, Rosenfeld, & Keller, 2013). The reliability estimates in the current study were high with a Cronbach alpha coefficient of .90 at baseline and .96 post-treatment.…”
Section: Harvard Trauma Questionnaire-revised Part IV (Htq-iv)mentioning
confidence: 69%
“…Lavelle, Truong, Tor, & Yang, 1990), while others found statistically significant symptom reductions following multidisciplinary treatment (Brune, Haasen, Krausz, Yagdiran, Bustos, & Eisenman, 2002;Carlsson et al, 2005;Raghavan et al, 2013). There may be several reasons for these non-significant findings.…”
Section: S C I E N T I F I C a R T I C L Ementioning
confidence: 72%