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Psychiatric Sequelae of Former "Comfort Women," Survivors of the Japanese Military Sexual Slavery during World War II

Authors
Lee, JeewonKwak, Young-SookKim, Yoon-JungKim, Eun-JiPark, E. JinShin, YunmiLee, Bun-HeeLee, So HeeJung, Hee YeonLee, InseonHwang, Jung ImKim, DongsikLee, Soyoung Irene
Issue Date
Apr-2018
Publisher
대한신경정신의학회
Keywords
Comfort women; Japanese military sexual slavery; Psychiatric sequelae; Posttraumatic stress disorder
Citation
PSYCHIATRY INVESTIGATION, v.15, no.4, pp 336 - 343
Pages
8
Journal Title
PSYCHIATRY INVESTIGATION
Volume
15
Number
4
Start Page
336
End Page
343
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/6056
DOI
10.30773/pi.2017.11.08.2
ISSN
1738-3684
1976-3026
Abstract
"Comfort women" refers to young women and girls who were forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese military during World War II. They were abducted from their homes in countries under Imperial Japanese rule, mostly from Korea, and the rest from China, Philippines, Malaysia, Taiwan, Indonesia, the Netherlands, etc. "Comfort women" endured extreme trauma involving rape, sexual torture, physical abuse, starvation, threats of death, and witnessed many others being tortured and killed. This article reviews all the studies that have investigated the psychiatric or psychosocial sequelae of the survivors of the Japanese military sexual slavery. Most importantly, a recent study which conducted a psychiatric evaluation on the former "comfort women" currently alive in South Korea is introduced. The participants' unmarried rate was relatively high and their total fertility rate was relatively low. Majority of the participants reported having no education and being the low economic status. They showed high current and lifetime prevalence of posttraumatic disorder, major depressive disorder, somatic symptom disorder, social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and alcohol use disorder. Participants showed high suicidality and majority of the participants still reported being ashamed of being former "comfort women" after all these years. This article highlights the fact that the trauma has affected the mental health and social functioning of former "comfort women" throughout their lives, and even to the present day.
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