Complex Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
Recommended DSM diagnostic criteria, per Trauma and Recovery
by Judith Herman, c1992 by Basic Books.
- A history of subjection to totalitarian control over a
prolonged period (months to years). Examples include hostages,
prisoners of war, concentration-camp survivors, and survivors of some
religious cults. Examples also include those subjected to totalitarian
systems in sexual and domestic life, including survivors of domestic
battering, childhood physical or sexual abuse, and organized sexual
exploitation.
- Alterations in affect regulation, including:
- persistent dysphoria
- chronic suicidal preoccupation
- self-injury
- explosive or extremely inhibited anger (may alternate)
- compulsive or extremely inhibited sexuality (may alternate)
- Alterations in consciousness, including:
- amnesia or hypermnesia for traumatic events
- transient dissociative episodes
- depersonalization/derealization
- reliving experiences, either in the form of intrusive
post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms or in the form
of ruminative preoccupation
- Alterations in self-perception, including:
- sense of helplessness or paralysis of initiative
- shame, guilt, and self-blame
- sense of defilement or stigma
- sense of complete difference from others (may include
sense of specialness, utter aloneness, belief no other
person can understand, or nonhuman identity)
- Alterations in perception of perpetrator, including:
- preoccupation with relationship with perpetrator
(includes preoccupation with revenge)
- unrealistic attribution of total power to perpetrator
(caution: victim's assessment of power realities may be
more realistic than clinician's)
- idealization or paradoxical gratitude
- sense of special or supernatural relationship
- acceptance of belief system or rationalizations of perpetrator
- Alterations in relations with others, including:
- isolation and withdrawal
- disruption in intimate relationships
- repeated search for rescuer (may alternate with isolation
and withdrawal)
- persistent distrust
- repeated failures of self-protection
- Alterations in systems of meaning:
- loss of sustaining faith
- sense of hopelessness and despair
