Title
Post-traumatic stress disorder associated with natural and human-made disasters in the World Mental Health Surveys
Date Issued
01 January 2017
Access level
open access
Resource Type
review
Author(s)
Bromet E.J.
Atwoli L.
Kawakami N.
Navarro-Mateu F.
Piotrowski P.
King A.J.
Aguilar-Gaxiola S.
Alonso J.
Bunting B.
Demyttenaere K.
Florescu S.
De Girolamo G.
Gluzman S.
Haro J.M.
De Jonge P.
Karam E.G.
Lee S.
Kovess-Masfety V.
Medina-Mora M.E.
Mneimneh Z.
Pennell B.E.
Posada-Villa J.
Salmerón D.
Takeshima T.
Kessler R.C.
IMIM-Hospital del Mar Research Institute
Colegio Mayor de Cundinamarca University
Publisher(s)
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
Background Research on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) following natural and human-made disasters has been undertaken for more than three decades. Although PTSD prevalence estimates vary widely, most are in the 20-40% range in disaster-focused studies but considerably lower (3-5%) in the few general population epidemiological surveys that evaluated disaster-related PTSD as part of a broader clinical assessment. The World Mental Health (WMH) Surveys provide an opportunity to examine disaster-related PTSD in representative general population surveys across a much wider range of sites than in previous studies. Method Although disaster-related PTSD was evaluated in 18 WMH surveys, only six in high-income countries had enough respondents for a risk factor analysis. Predictors considered were socio-demographics, disaster characteristics, and pre-disaster vulnerability factors (childhood family adversities, prior traumatic experiences, and prior mental disorders). Results Disaster-related PTSD prevalence was 0.0-3.8% among adult (ages 18+) WMH respondents and was significantly related to high education, serious injury or death of someone close, forced displacement from home, and pre-existing vulnerabilities (prior childhood family adversities, other traumas, and mental disorders). Of PTSD cases 44.5% were among the 5% of respondents classified by the model as having highest PTSD risk. Conclusion Disaster-related PTSD is uncommon in high-income WMH countries. Risk factors are consistent with prior research: Severity of exposure, history of prior stress exposure, and pre-existing mental disorders. The high concentration of PTSD among respondents with high predicted risk in our model supports the focus of screening assessments that identify disaster survivors most in need of preventive interventions.
Start page
227
End page
241
Volume
47
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Psicología (incluye relaciones hombre-máquina) Medicina clínica Psiquiatría
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84984691845
PubMed ID
Source
Psychological Medicine
ISSN of the container
00332917
Sponsor(s)
National Institute of Mental Health R01MH070884 NIMH
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus