1. ICD-11 new diagnosis — why "complex"?
CPTSD, first proposed by Judith Herman in "Trauma and Recovery" (1992), became an official diagnosis 26 years later (ICD-11, in force 2018). DSM-5 still recognizes only single-incident PTSD. CPTSD is separate because single-incident trauma (a car crash, a disaster) leaves different damage in the brain, body, and identity than prolonged, repeated trauma (10 years of child abuse, 15 years of domestic violence).
2. PTSD vs CPTSD symptom table
| Axis | PTSD | CPTSD (additional) |
|---|---|---|
| Re-experiencing | Flashbacks, nightmares | + "emotional flashbacks" (panic without cause) |
| Avoidance | Avoiding places, people | + avoidance of intimate relationships themselves |
| Hyperarousal | Startle reflex, sleep | + chronic dissociation (zoning out, depersonalization) |
| Affect regulation | — | Rage explosions, depression, self-harm |
| Self-concept | — | "I am dirty / worthless" |
| Interpersonal | — | No trust, idealization / devaluation, isolation |
3. ACEs (Adverse Childhood Experiences) scoring table
Felitti & Anda (1998), Kaiser Permanente, n=17,337. Each of the following items counts as 1 point:
- Emotional abuse (repeated insults / threats)
- Physical abuse
- Sexual abuse
- Emotional neglect
- Physical neglect (no food, clothes, protection)
- Parental separation / divorce
- Witnessing mother's abuse
- Family alcohol or drug addiction
- Family mental illness or suicide attempt
- Family incarceration
4. Risk by ACE score
| Score | Depression risk | Suicide attempts | Heart disease | Alcoholism |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 1.0 |
| 1–3 | 2.2× | 4.5× | 1.3× | 2.5× |
| 4+ | 4.6× | 12.2× | 2.2× | 7.4× |
ACE ≥ 4 is 12.5% of the US population; estimated 18% in Korea (normalized child corporal punishment and "strict education" culture).
5. Dissociation mechanism
An abused child cannot escape physically, so "the mind escapes" — dissociation. The Self splits into multiple "Parts". Symptoms: zoning out, time loss, "I am not me" (depersonalization), the world is unreal (derealization). Polyvagal theory (Porges): the dorsal branch of the vagus stays stuck in shutdown (freeze). 50% of CPTSD adults show clinical dissociation (DES-II ≥ 30).
6. Janet / Herman 3-stage treatment
Stage 1: Stabilization (6 months – 2 years)
- Secure safe environment (cut off from the abuser, economic independence)
- Dissociation coping (grounding techniques, 5-4-3-2-1)
- Affect regulation skills (DBT adaptation)
- Body sensation recovery (Somatic Experiencing, yoga)
Stage 2: Trauma processing (1 – 3 years)
- Enter only after Stage 1 stabilization is sufficient
- EMDR / CPT / Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET)
- Reconstructing the meaning of trauma memories
Stage 3: Reintegration (ongoing)
- Forming a new identity
- Building healthy intimate relationships
- Discovering meaning and life purpose
7. Why jumping straight to EMDR is dangerous
Recalling trauma directly without stabilization worsens dissociation and increases self-harm and suicide risk. Single-incident PTSD (car crash) responds to 6–12 EMDR sessions, but CPTSD requires 6 months to 2 years of stabilization alone. In Korea, "PTSD treatment" materials are based on single-incident PTSD, so CPTSD patients commonly receive the wrong treatment.
8. Korean resources
- Sunflower Centers (sexual / domestic violence): 39 nationwide, 24-hour
- Women's Emergency Hotline: 1366
- Child abuse reporting: 112, 1577-1391
- National Center for Mental Health Trauma Clinic (Seoul)
- Korean EMDR Association registered therapists — must verify they offer "phase-based treatment"
9. Crisis
Suicidal thoughts: 1577-0199. During a dissociative episode: splash cold water on your face, say your name and the date out loud, "look at 5 safe things in this room".