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1 pt associated with PTSD and with exposure to assaultive and non-assaultive traumas (no PTSD), as esti
2 o examine the association between physically assaultive behavior and experience of social welfare lev
3 atient with a long history of antisocial and assaultive behavior who struck and injured a psychiatric
4 y and major theft, property destruction, and assaultive behavior).
5 use of hard drugs, property destruction, and assaultive behavior.
6 luctant to diagnose and treat aggressive and assaultive features in psychiatric patients and instead
7 subtype, and to have a history of physically assaultive or fear-inducing behavior.
8                                   Physically assaultive schizophrenia patients (N=99) were randomly a
9                                   Physically assaultive subjects with schizophrenia or schizoaffectiv
10 holics, possibly those with more aggressive, assaultive tendencies.
11 s best explained the variance in exposure to assaultive trauma (e.g., robbery, sexual assault), where
12 of the same genes that influence exposure to assaultive trauma appear to influence susceptibility to
13      Correlations between genetic effects on assaultive trauma exposure and on PTSD symptoms were hig
14 PTSD and with exposure to assaultive and non-assaultive traumas (no PTSD), as estimated using discret
15 The highest risk of PTSD was associated with assaultive violence (20.9%).
16 years were at increased risk for exposure to assaultive violence (adjusted odds ratio, 2.6; 95% confi
17 earch has focused on combat, rape, and other assaultive violence as causes of PTSD, sudden unexpected
18 ems were more likely to experience traumatic assaultive violence events (e.g., being mugged/threatene
19 anxiety, early alcohol and cannabis use, and assaultive violence exposure), family and peer factors (
20 ts who experienced multiple events involving assaultive violence in childhood were more likely to exp
21                       The effect of previous assaultive violence persisted over time with little chan
22 rst grade were at lower risk for exposure to assaultive violence traumas.
23 to traumatic events (adjusted odds ratio for assaultive violence, 0.3; 95% confidence interval, 0.2-0
24       Furthermore, previous events involving assaultive violence--single or multiple, in childhood or
25  by increasing the likelihood of exposure to assaultive violence.
26 who refused treatment were more likely to be assaultive, were more likely to require seclusion and re