cris.boxmetadata.label.title
Trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder in Japan: Results from the World Mental Health Japan Survey
cris.boxmetadata.label.dateissued
01 browse.startsWith.months.january 2014
cris.boxmetadata.label.accesslevel
open access
cris.boxmetadata.label.resourcetype
journal article
cris.boxmetadata.label.authors
Kawakami N.
Tsuchiya M.
Umeda M.
Koenen K.C.
Kessler R.C.
cris.boxmetadata.label.publisher
Elsevier Ltd
cris.boxmetadata.label.abstract
The purpose of the study was to report the prevalence of trauma exposure and PTSD, conditional risk of PTSD associated with each trauma exposure in the community population in Japan. An interview survey was conducted of a random sample of adult residents in 11 communities of Japan. Among 4134 respondents (response rate, 55%), data from those who completed the part 2 interview (n=1682) were analyzed with a weight for this subsample. Lifetime experiences of 27 trauma events and PTSD were assessed using the WHO-Composite International Diagnostic Interview version 3.0. Sixty percent of the part 2 sample reported exposure to at least one lifetime traumatic event. Lifetime and 12-month PTSD prevalences were 1.3% and 0.7%, respectively. Percentage of all months lived with PTSD in the population was predominantly accounted for by physical/sexual assaults and having a child with serious illness, and unexpected death of loved one. Ten percent of respondents reported "private events", for which respondents did not have to describe the content, which accounted for 19% of months with PTSD. The lower prevalence of PTSD in Japan seems attributable to lower conditional risks of PTSD following these events, as well as different distributions of the events. The greater impact of events that occurred to loved ones rather than to oneself and "private events" on PTSD in Japan warrants further research of cross-cultural assessment of trauma exposure and cultural heterogeneity in the trauma-PTSD relationship. © 2014.
cris.boxmetadata.label.citationstartpage
157
cris.boxmetadata.label.citationendpage
165
cris.boxmetadata.label.volume
53
cris.boxmetadata.label.issue
1
cris.boxmetadata.label.language
English
cris.boxmetadata.label.ocdeknowledgeArea
Políticas de salud, Servicios de salud
Psiquiatría
cris.boxmetadata.label.doi
cris.boxmetadata.label.scopusidentifier
2-s2.0-84897460498
cris.boxmetadata.label.pubmedidentifier
cris.boxmetadata.label.source
Journal of Psychiatric Research
cris.boxmetadata.label.containerissn
00223956
cris.boxmetadata.label.sponsor
The WMH Japan 2002–2006 Survey was supported by the Grant for Research on Psychiatric and Neurological Diseases and Mental Health from the Japan Ministry of Health, Labour, and Welfare ( H13-SHOGAI-023 , H14-TOKUBETSU-026 , H16-KOKORO-013 , H19-KOKORO-IPPAN-011 , H20-KOKORO-IPPAN-009 ). The survey was carried out in conjunction with the World Health Organization World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative which is supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH; R01 MH070884 and R01 MH093612-01 ), the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation , the Pfizer Foundation , the US Public Health Service ( R13-MH066849 , R01-MH069864 , and R01 DA016558 ), the Fogarty International Center ( FIRCA R03-TW006481 ), the Pan American Health Organization , Eli Lilly and Company , Ortho-McNeil Pharmaceutical , GlaxoSmithKline , and Bristol-Myers Squibb . We thank the staff of the WMH Data Collection and Data Analysis Coordination Centres for assistance with instrumentation, fieldwork, and consultation on data analysis. None of the funders had any role in the design, analysis, interpretation of results, or preparation of this paper. A complete list of all within-country and cross-national WMH publications can be found at http://www.hcp.med.harvard.edu/wmh/ .
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