Lynskey 1997; Kessler et al. 1997; Kendler et al. 2000; Molnar et al. 2001; Nelson et al. 2002, 2006; Green et al. 2010; McLaughlin et al. 2010; Scott et al. 2010), it is important to remember that our estimates represent risk associated with a one SD increase in CTF score in contrast to most other reports of risk associated with the history of a particular type of trauma exposure. A National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC) report (Keyes et al. 2012) that used structural equation modeling to explore the relationship between five childhood trauma factors and latent externalizing and internalizing dimensions of psychopathology argued that individual trauma factors had unique loadings on these dimensions. Their CSA factor had significant positive loadings on both psychopathology dimensions in men and women; their CPA factor loaded only on externalizing disorders in men and internalizing disorders in women. They included parental partner violence and other forms of adversity as covariates in some analyses. One important caveat to their results is that although the NESARC interview examined five forms of childhood trauma using questions taken from the CTQ‐SF (Bernstein et al. 2003) and the Conflict Tactics Scale (Straus 1979) the number of