Home
Scholarly Works
Trauma-Related Altered States of Consciousness...
Journal article

Trauma-Related Altered States of Consciousness (TRASC) and Functional Impairment I: Prospective Study in Acutely Traumatized Persons

Abstract

A theoretical framework referred to as a 4-D model has been described for classifying posttraumatic stress symptoms into those potentially occurring within normal waking consciousness (NWC) versus those thought to intrinsically exemplify dissociative experiences, specifically, trauma-related altered states of consciousness (TRASC). As a further test of this theoretical distinction, this prospective study evaluated whether TRASC and NWC forms of distress incrementally and prospectively predicted functional impairment at 6 and 12 weeks following presentation at hospital emergency departments in the acute aftermath of traumatic events in 180 persons. Establishing the clinical significance of both TRASC and NWC-distress symptoms, we found that 6-week markers of TRASC and NWC-distress independently predicted 12-week self-reported levels of social and occupational impairment. We also observed broad support for various predictions of the 4-D model except that, in contrast with hypotheses, childhood trauma history was generally more strongly correlated with symptoms of NWC-distress than with TRASC. Future research directions are discussed.

Authors

Frewen P; Hegadoren K; Coupland NJ; Rowe BH; Neufeld RWJ; Lanius R

Journal

Journal of Trauma & Dissociation, Vol. 16, No. 5, pp. 500–519

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

October 20, 2015

DOI

10.1080/15299732.2015.1022925

ISSN

1529-9732

Contact the Experts team