It must be true if Wikipedia has it, yes?
No... please outline to me where are the diagnostic criteria? Where is it within the ICD or DSM? Can someone please show me where its scheduled for inclusion in the forthcoming ICD or DSM?
It doesn't exist... and you need to read the discussion to that wikipedia page, as health professionals globally recommend it be removed, yet wikipedia won't... because it insists that the page has relevance, even though it has no legal standing and CANNOT be diagnosed.
Any person on this forum who says they have CPTSD, you need to go back and ask your psychiatrist to see the legal diagnoses they have given you, and I guarantee it won't say CPTSD for insurance or prescription / any legal medical purpose.
CPTSD is just a coined phrase, there is zero diagnostic criteria or substance to it. The DSM has rejected it from inclusion, even into the DSM V, rejected, and the ICD aren't adopting it either.
This is not a new discussion and people need to do research, beyond wikipedia, because it doesn't exist with any medical, insurance or legal scope. You don't have CPTSD, you have PTSD + dissociative disorder and/or personality disorder. That is the legal, medical, and insurance diagnoses you will receive, not CPTSD.
People need to start doing more research and less believing in crap you find on some website... that is the problem with the web... filtering through the crap to find the truth. I did a quick search on wikipedia problems, and straight away I find a previous admission by a founder the site is full of inaccurate information:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/10/18/wikipedia_quality_problem/
Google is your friend, use it to find the truth, not just one angle or the other, but the truth about something.
US Department of Veterans Affairs discussion on it, updated in 2010:
Link Removed with still no viability.
People should also not confuse complex PTSD with complex trauma. The first is not real, the second is.