2018
DOI: 10.1111/acps.12956
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The International Trauma Questionnaire: development of a self‐report measure of ICD‐11 PTSD and complex PTSD

Abstract: The ITQ is a brief, simply worded measure of the core features of PTSD and CPTSD. It is consistent with the organizing principles of the ICD-11 to maximize clinical utility and international applicability through a focus on a limited but central set of symptoms. The measure is freely available and can be found in the body of this paper.

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Cited by 782 publications
(866 citation statements)
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References 28 publications
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“…With the upcoming release of the ICD-11 and an official definition, reliable and valid measurements will solve this problem. The ICD Trauma Questionnaire (Cloitre, Roberts, Bisson, & Brewin, 2015) is a first attempt at such an instrument. The divergent results with regard to the factor structure might be a consequence of the different types of measurement (i.e.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the upcoming release of the ICD-11 and an official definition, reliable and valid measurements will solve this problem. The ICD Trauma Questionnaire (Cloitre, Roberts, Bisson, & Brewin, 2015) is a first attempt at such an instrument. The divergent results with regard to the factor structure might be a consequence of the different types of measurement (i.e.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, at the time of planning the current study, no instrument was yet available to assess the proposed ICD-11 criteria (Brewin et al, 2009; Maercker et al, 2013). We are aware that in the meantime an instrument assessing the proposed ICD-11 criteria was developed (Cloitre, Roberts, Bisson, & Brewin, 2015) that has been used in recent research (Dokkedahl, Oboke, Ovuga, & Elklit, 2015). However, this instrument has not been well enough established and validated up to now.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Consistent with this, there is growing evidence from research in western settings supporting the validity of this disorder with individuals exposed to sustained interpersonal trauma (Perkonigg et al, 2015), institutional abuse (Knefel, Garvert, Cloitre, & Lueger-Schuster, 20152015), childhood abuse (Cloitre, Garvert, Weiss, Carlson, & Bryant, 2014), and people seeking treatment following exposure to a range of trauma types (Cloitre et al, 2013). While CPTSD was originally formulated to describe distinctive psychological responses arising from events where an individual is under the sustained and coercive control of a perpetrator (i.e., torture) (Herman, 1992), there has been scarce examination of CPTSD in individuals from non-western countries who have been exposed to persecution, mass trauma, and torture.…”
mentioning
confidence: 93%