Frequency of early childhood trauma in psychiatric patients: an investigation with the Early Trauma Inventory–Self Report
N. M. Szeifert, B. Sebők, B. Szabó, M. Miklósi, Á. Schmelowszky

TL;DR
This study used a self-report tool to find that many psychiatric patients in Hungary experienced childhood trauma, especially emotional and physical abuse.
Contribution
The study provides new empirical data on the frequency of specific childhood trauma types in psychiatric patients using the Early Trauma Inventory–Self Report.
Findings
Emotional traumas like being ridiculed or ignored were most common among participants.
Physical traumas such as being slapped or pushed were also frequently reported.
Sexual abuse experiences, including inappropriate touching, were reported by nearly a third of participants.
Abstract
Childhood trauma is an important public health problem but there are limitations in our ability to measure childhood trauma. Early Trauma Inventory is a self-report instrument for the assessment of childhood trauma that is valid but simple to administer. We aimed to assess the frequency of childhood trauma in patients of a large sample of the Crisis Intervention and Psychiatric Ward in Budapest, Hungary. Data from 279 patients referred to Péterfy Alexander Hospital, Crisis Intervention and Psychiatric Ward, Budapest, Hungary, were analyzed. Most participants were female (n = 202, 72.4%) between the ages of 17 and 86 (M = 38.37 yrs). Half of the participants were diagnosed with major depressive disorder (n = 138, 49.5%) or anxiety disorder (n = 149, 53.4%), while 47 of the participants suffered from bipolar disorder (16.8%). One hundred thirty-eight participants had at least one…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducational and Psychological Assessments · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development
