Long-Term PTSD in Survivors of Violent Crime

Authors

  • Dr. Amelia K. Jennings Author

Keywords:

PTSD, Violent Crime, Trauma, Chronic Stress, Psychological Recovery, Victimology

Abstract

Survivors of violent crime—such as assault, rape, armed robbery, kidnapping, and attempted homicide—frequently develop Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Long-term PTSD persists beyond one year and can evolve into chronic psychological disability characterized by intrusive memories, hypervigilance, dissociation, emotional dysregulation, and impaired social functioning. This study explores the long-term psychological effects of violent crime, the neurobiological underpinnings of trauma retention, and factors affecting recovery. Using a hypothetical longitudinal dataset across Australia, India, and Spain, the study identifies risk factors including severity of violence, delayed intervention, lack of legal justice, and pre-existing trauma. A multi-layer therapeutic framework is proposed to support long-term healing.

References

Published

2026-04-16

How to Cite

Long-Term PTSD in Survivors of Violent Crime. (2026). American Journal of Forensic Psychology, 20(1). https://americanforensicpsychology.org/index.php/ajfp/article/view/47

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