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Frequency of traumatic events, physical and psychological health among Māori / Hirini, Paul; Flett, Ross A.; Long, Nigel; Millar, Michelle

By: Contributor(s): Material type: ArticleArticleSeries: New Zealand Journal of PsychologyPublication details: Christchurch New Zealand Psychological Society 2005Description: computer file : World Wide WebISSN:
  • 0112-109X
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • TRVF 000085
Online resources: In: New Zealand Journal of Psychology 34(1) March 2005 : 20-28Summary: The authors examined the lifetime prevalence of 12 traumatic experiences (combat, child sex abuse, sexual abuse as an adult, family violence, other physical assault, theft by force, vehicle accident, other accident, natural disaster, disaster precautions, traumatic death (secondary trauma) and the links between these experiences and physical and mental health, via a cross sectional survey of 502 community dwelling New Zealand Māori adults. They found that the overall frequency with which such events occur in this group to be relatively high. Males were significantly more likely than females to report experience of combat, physical assault, theft by force, vehicle accident and other forms of accident. Females were significantly more likely to report sexual abuse as a child or adult, violence at the hands of a family member, and a traumatic death of a loved one. Younger respondents and those living in urban areas also reported more traumatic experiences of various sorts. There were some significant linkages between traumatic experiences and mental health (specifically PTSD, and the well-being scale of the MHI) but the size of the effects were small. They argue, that despite methodological limitations, these data are instructive about the frequency and impact of traumatic events among this group.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Barcode
Access online Access online Vine library Online Available ON12070175
Journal article Journal article Vine library TRVF 000085 Available Z01001708

New Zealand Journal of Psychology 34(1) March 2005 : 20-28

The authors examined the lifetime prevalence of 12 traumatic experiences (combat, child sex abuse, sexual abuse as an adult, family violence, other physical assault, theft by force, vehicle accident, other accident, natural disaster, disaster precautions, traumatic death (secondary trauma) and the links between these experiences and physical and mental health, via a cross sectional survey of 502 community dwelling New Zealand Māori adults. They found that the overall frequency with which such events occur in this group to be relatively high. Males were significantly more likely than females to report experience of combat, physical assault, theft by force, vehicle accident and other forms of accident. Females were significantly more likely to report sexual abuse as a child or adult, violence at the hands of a family member, and a traumatic death of a loved one. Younger respondents and those living in urban areas also reported more traumatic experiences of various sorts. There were some significant linkages between traumatic experiences and mental health (specifically PTSD, and the well-being scale of the MHI) but the size of the effects were small. They argue, that despite methodological limitations, these data are instructive about the frequency and impact of traumatic events among this group.