While existing research suggests vulnerability of the deaf community to trauma, very little data exists on prevalence, symptom manifestation, and/or unique characteristics of the response of deaf adults and children to traumatic events. In this research, 79 deaf adults were interviewed with the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale, the Life Event Checklist, the Trauma Symptom Inventory, the Peritraumatic Distress Scale, and the Somatoform Dissociation Questionnaire. The average number of unique trauma types experienced per participant was high, averaging 6.18 (SD = 2.65). Findings supported the dose-response model for trauma. Vulnerability factors included number of traumatic events, race/ethnicity, sexual orientation, additional disabilities, prior substance abuse, and low social support. Higher levels of trauma exposure were associated with more depression, anger, irritability, sexual concerns, tension reduction behaviors, and substance abuse problems. The unique trauma symptoms of deaf trauma survivors, including higher levels of dissociation, are discussed. A concept relevant to the deaf trauma community-information deprivation trauma-is introduced.
The Quality of Life Supports Model as a major component in applying the quality of life paradigm
Abstract Social change is built on paradigms and models. A paradigm needs an operational action model to successfully implement the paradigm, and an operational model