Exposures to violence - adult proto

General Details:

Name:
Exposures to violence - adult proto
Steward:
PhenX
Definition:
The respondent is asked a comprehensive list of questions about trauma and victimization experiences over his/her lifetime. If the respondent answers "yes" to the first question, the interviewer administers additional follow-up questions about the event. Follow-up questions collect information about the person's age when the event occurred, whether serious injury or death was involved, if there was an intense feeling of fear and helplessness, the frequency of the event, and whether anyone else ever tried to harm the person in the same way. The questions are sensitive and cover subjects such as physical violence, sexual abuse, suicide, and murder. The Psychosocial Working Group recommends that the Lifetime Traumatic and Victimization History (LTVH) instrument be used as a comprehensive assessment of an individual's lifetime experiences to traumatic and victimization events. This instrument is used to capture information about a wide range of serious events (e.g., natural disasters, physical or sexual abuse, criminal assault, items stolen from you, accidents) that may have negative consequences (e.g., psychological distress, increased vulnerability). It is not a diagnostic tool for mental health conditions. Adults who have experienced physical abuse, sexual abuse, or another traumatic event may be very sensitive to these questions. The interviewer should respect the privacy of the respondent and administer the questions in a location where others cannot overhear the interview.
Registration Status:
Qualified

Designations:

Designation:
Exposures to violence - adult proto
Tags:
Short Name
Designation:
PhenX - exposures to violence - adult protocol 181401
Tags:
Long Common Name

Designations:

Definition:
The respondent is asked a comprehensive list of questions about trauma and victimization experiences over his/her lifetime. If the respondent answers "yes" to the first question, the interviewer administers additional follow-up questions about the event. Follow-up questions collect information about the person's age when the event occurred, whether serious injury or death was involved, if there was an intense feeling of fear and helplessness, the frequency of the event, and whether anyone else ever tried to harm the person in the same way. The questions are sensitive and cover subjects such as physical violence, sexual abuse, suicide, and murder. The Psychosocial Working Group recommends that the Lifetime Traumatic and Victimization History (LTVH) instrument be used as a comprehensive assessment of an individual's lifetime experiences to traumatic and victimization events. This instrument is used to capture information about a wide range of serious events (e.g., natural disasters, physical or sexual abuse, criminal assault, items stolen from you, accidents) that may have negative consequences (e.g., psychological distress, increased vulnerability). It is not a diagnostic tool for mental health conditions. Adults who have experienced physical abuse, sexual abuse, or another traumatic event may be very sensitive to these questions. The interviewer should respect the privacy of the respondent and administer the questions in a location where others cannot overhear the interview.
Tags:
Source: Regenstrief LOINC

Reference Documents:

ID:
Title:
URI:
Provider Org:
Language Code:
en-US
Document:
Widom, C. S., Dutton, M. A., Czaja, S. J., & DuMont, K. A. (2005). Development and validation of a new instrument to assess lifetime trauma and victimization history. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 18(5), 519–531.
ID:
Title:
URI:
Provider Org:
Language Code:
en-US
Document:
Goodman, L. A., Corcoran, C. B., Turner, K., Yuan, N., & Green, B. L. (1998). Assessing traumatic event exposure: General issues and preliminary findings for the stressful life events screening questionnaire. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 11(3), 521–542.
ID:
Title:
URI:
Provider Org:
Language Code:
en-US
Document:
Green, B. (1996). Traumatic stress and disaster: Mental health factors influencing adaptation. Annual Review of Psychiatry. In F. L. Mak & C. C. Nadelson (Eds.), International Review of Psychiatry (Vol. 2, pp. 177–210). Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press.
ID:
Title:
URI:
Provider Org:
Language Code:
en-US
Document:
Norris, F. H. (1992). Epidemiology of trauma: Frequency and impact of different potentially traumatic events on different demographic groups. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 60, 409–418.
ID:
Title:
URI:
Provider Org:
Language Code:
en-US
Document:
Widom, C. S., Czaja, S.J., & Dutton, M. A. (2008). Childhood victimization and lifetime revictimization. Child Abuse & Neglect, 32, 785–796

Properties:

Key:
Related Names
Value:
PanPanelPANEL.PHENX
PanlPnlPoint in time
Random
Key:
Related Codes
Value:
Code SystemCodeCode TextCode Version
https://www.phenxtoolkit.org181401exposures_to_violence___adult
Key:
Fully-Specified Name
Value:
ComponentPropertyTimeSystemScaleMethod
PhenX - exposures to violence - adult protocol 181401-Pt^Patient-PhenX
Key:
Basic Attributes
Value:
ClassTypeFirst ReleasedLast UpdatedChange ReasonPanel Type
PANEL.PHENXClinicalVersion 2.36Version 2.66Updated the PhenX ID from "PhenX." to "PX" in Survey Question Source field to align with the variable identifier used in the PhenX Toolkit.; Added the PhenX protocol ID to the Component to clearly define the protocol version for which this panel is based upon.Panel

Identifiers:

Source:
NLM
Id:
Qkk1ma2ox
Version:
1.0
Source:
PhenX
Id:
181401
Version:
Source:
LOINC
Id:
62944-4
Version:
2.69