The Trauma Myth: The Truth about the Sexual Abuse of Children - and  Its 
Aftermath  reviewed by Philip M. Coons 
excerpts:

"Clancy's  polemic against the trauma theory of clinicians and researchers 
who seek to  understand and treat sexual abuse victims as adults has 
produced a flawed book."  

"Beginning in the mid-1990s, Susan Clancy, now a psychology associate at  
Harvard, interviewed over 200 adults about memory and childhood sexual abuse  
experiences. Two-thirds of her interviewees were women. She solicited her  
subjects through a newspaper ad in the Boston Globe and other Boston-area  
newspapers. Unfortunately she does not completely describe her methodology, 
and  her sample appears to have been biased."

"Not a clinician herself, Clancy  takes a narrow diagnostic view of trauma, 
the one found in the 2000 edition of  the American Psychiatric 
Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of  Mental Disorders. According 
to the 
DSM, a diagnosis of posttraumatic stress  disorder requires that an 
individual's response to a traumatic event involve  "intense fear, 
helplessness, or 
horror." She seems to have missed the note  explaining that in children 
discomfort "may be expressed by disorganized or  agitated." 

"Clancy and others have found that it is not uncommon for  victims to 
forget the sexual abuse. Despite her findings, however, Clancy  attacks the 
idea 
of what she calls repressed memory. She incorrectly observes  that the more 
traumatic the sexual abuse events are, the less likely the victim  will be 
to forget. This mistaken opinion has previously been refuted by Lenore  
Terr's elegant studies involving traumatized children. Jennifer Freyd, in her  
1998 book, Betrayal Trauma: The Logic of Forgetting Child hood Abuse, takes a  
much wider view of the effects of trauma on children and cogently explains 
how  sexual abuse leads to distrust, shame and guilt in children and adults. 
She also  explains how and why children may forget their sexual abuse 
experiences and  later recover their memories in adulthood behavior."  

"Although  Clancy includes excerpts from some of her interviews, her book 
contains no  figures or tables tabulating her findings; nor does she present 
many of the  results from the experimental clinical interviews and rating 
scales that she  used. Thus far, Clancy's study on the effects of childhood 
sexual abuse has not  appeared in a peer-reviewed scientific journal.Clancy 
argues that current  prevention and treatment methods based on the trauma 
model do not work, but she  appears to be mistaken. David Finkelhor's 2008 book 
Childhood Victimization:  Violence, Crime, and Abuse in the Lives of Young 
People, which she lists in  chapter notes, mentions that childhood sexual 
abuse has declined dramatically  since the mid-1990s, and just recently a 
massive new federal study, the National  Incidence Study of Child Abuse and 
Neglect, showed a 38 percent drop in the  number of sexually abused children 
since 1993." _http://www.christiancentury.org/article.lasso?id=8378_ 
(http://www.christiancentury.org/article.lasso?id=8378)   

Reply via email to