Title of article
Dimensions of trauma associated with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) caseness, severity and functional impairment: a study of Bosnian refugees resettled in Australia
Author/Authors
S. Momartin، نويسنده , , Eric D. Silove، نويسنده , , V. Manicavasagar، نويسنده , , Z. Steel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
7
From page
775
To page
781
Abstract
Refugee survivors of inter-ethnic warfare vary greatly in the extent and range of their trauma experiences. Discerning which experiences are most salient to generating and perpetuating disorders such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is critical to the mounting rational strategies for targeted psychosocial interventions. In a sample of Bosnian Muslim refugees (n=126) drawn from a community centre and supplemented by a snowball sampling method, PTSD status and associated disability were measured using the clinician-administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) for DSM-IV. A principal components analysis (PCA) based on a pool of trauma items yielded four coherent trauma dimensions: Human Rights Violations, Threat to Life, Traumatic Loss and Dispossession and Eviction. A cluster analysis identified three subgroupings according to extent of trauma exposure. There were no differences in PTSD risk for the group most exposed to human rights violations (internment in concentration camps, torture) compared to the general war-exposed group. Logistic regression analysis using the dimensions derived from the PCA indicated that Threat to Life alone of the four trauma factors predicted PTSD status, a finding that supports the DSM-IV definition of a trauma. Both Threat to Life and Traumatic Loss contributed to symptom severity and disability associated with PTSD. It may be that human rights violations pose a more general threat to the survivorʹs future psychosocial adaptation in areas of functioning that extend beyond the confines of PTSD.
Keywords
Trauma , Bosnian refugees , Resettlement , Australia
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
601540
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