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  2. Apr 13, 2023 · Many studies have shown positive associations between coercive controlling behaviors, including specific forms of economic abuse, stalking, and reproductive coercion, with mental health outcomes including PTSD, depression, and other mental health symptoms.

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  3. Oct 12, 2020 · As you would expect, the evidence showed controlling relationships have an adverse impact on mental health, and poor mental health and emotional wellbeing acted as a risk factor for being a victim of coercive control. In other words, they are mutually reinforcing.

  4. Jan 2, 2018 · This raises the importance of a reconsideration of coercion in psychiatric care: what it is, how prevalent it is, if it is supported by evidence and what, if anything, clinicians can do to reduce its sway.

    • Giles Newton-Howes
    • 2010
  5. This paper synthesises the findings of a rapid literature review to describe what we know about how common coercive control victimisation is, as well as risk factors and impacts of coercive control victimisation.

  6. This review indicated that coercive control exposure is moderately associated with both PTSD and depression. This highlights that mental health care is needed for those exposed to coercive control, including trauma-informed psychological interventions.

  7. Jul 9, 2019 · We consider the epidemiology of coercion in mental health and appraise the efficacy of attempts to reduce coercion and make specific recommendations for making mental healthcare less coercive and more consensual.

  8. Different levels of evidence indicate the benefit of staff training, shared decision-making interventions and integrated care interventions to reduce coercive treatment in mental health services.

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