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Dissociation As a Mechanism of Risk for Interpersonal Victimization Among Adolescent Girls

Childhood interpersonal violence exposure (IVE) is associated with repeated victimization in adolescence and adulthood. Research suggests dissociation, a psychological phenomenon characterized by alterations and disruptions to consciousness, memory, and perceptions of the environment, and out-of-bod...

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Published in:Journal of interpersonal violence 2025-01, Vol.40 (1-2), p.419-442
Main Authors: Kouri, Nicole A., Simon, Valerie A., Partridge, Ty
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description Childhood interpersonal violence exposure (IVE) is associated with repeated victimization in adolescence and adulthood. Research suggests dissociation, a psychological phenomenon characterized by alterations and disruptions to consciousness, memory, and perceptions of the environment, and out-of-body experiences, increases the risk of revictimization. Self-report data from a longitudinal study of 92 violence-exposed adolescent girls from a large, urban area were analyzed to assess whether dissociation predicts polyvictimization or exposure to multiple types of interpersonal violence across adolescence. Participants’ mental and interpersonal health was assessed at four in-person laboratory visits scheduled across 3.5 years (i.e., T1–T4). IVE included direct or indirect victimization experienced at home, school, the neighborhood, or town, such as child maltreatment, domestic violence, peer victimization, dating aggression, and community violence. Polyvictimization was operationalized as a composite score of the different types of IVE endorsed by the participant or caregiver. A random-intercept cross-lagged panel model was used to test the bidirectional relationships between dissociation and polyvictimization longitudinally. Cross-lagged regressions were analyzed to determine whether dissociation and polyvictimization predicted subsequent dissociation symptoms and polyvictimization. Concurrent and previous dissociation significantly accounted for polyvictimization at T2, T3, and T4. Polyvictimization did not significantly predict future dissociation symptoms. The results from this study provide support for dissociation’s unique contribution to polyvictimization among violence-exposed girls, making it an important target for clinical assessment and treatment.
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source Nexis Advance UK (Federated Access); SAGE Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescent
Adolescent girls
Adolescents
Caregivers
Child Abuse
Child abuse & neglect
Child Abuse - psychology
Child Abuse - statistics & numerical data
Child development
Crime Victims - psychology
Crime Victims - statistics & numerical data
Dissociative Disorders - psychology
Domestic violence
Exposure to Violence - psychology
Exposure to Violence - statistics & numerical data
Female
Girls
Humans
Interpersonal Relations
Longitudinal Studies
Mental health
Psychological research
Risk Factors
Symptoms
Victimization
Victims of Crime
Violence
title Dissociation As a Mechanism of Risk for Interpersonal Victimization Among Adolescent Girls
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