Title of article :
Participation in a trauma-focused epidemiological investigation
may result in sensitization for current health problems
Author/Authors :
Margot J. Verschuur، نويسنده , , Philip Spinhoven، نويسنده , , Arnold AP van Emmerik، نويسنده , , Frits R. Rosendaal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Objectives Participation in health survey
research may result in a worsening of self-assessed
health status and enhanced service-use by increasing
self-awareness of current health status. The present
study investigated whether participation in a traumafocused
epidemiological study sensitized participants
for health problems irrespective of trauma exposure.
Methods A total of 1,019 rescue workers and 453
residents involved in varying degrees in a large scale
aviation disaster participated. Data collection took
place between December 2000 and April 2003. There
were two measurements: one during the epidemiological
investigation at a general hospital and one
12 weeks after the first measurement. Follow-up data
were gathered in 80% of a randomly selected group of
rescue workers and in 62% of the residents. Main
outcome measures were: health anxiety, somatic
sensitivity, the tendency to be reassured by a physician,
psychopathology, post-traumatic stress symptoms,
fatigue and quality of life. Results Both rescue
workers and residents reported less reassurance, and
increased health anxiety and somatic sensitivity
12 weeks after the investigation compared to the first
measurement. Exposure to the aviation disaster was
not predictive of these changes in health perception,
but higher levels of psychological and physical
symptoms at baseline were. Only 0.2–1.6% of the
residents and rescue workers indicated at baseline
that the investigation had had a very negative impact
on their mental and/or physical well-being. No evidence
for systematic trends or changes in baseline
scores for anxiety about health or subjective complaints
during the 15 months inclusion period were
found. Conclusions Participation in an epidemiological
study of the long-term sequelae of disaster
exposure does not lead to very strong negative reactions
in most of the participants, but can result in an
increased awareness of somatic sensations, enhancement
of health worries and lowered reassurability by
physicians, especially in participants with higher
levels of psychological and physical symptoms at
baseline. Future studies are needed to investigate the
temporal stability of these inadvertent and unobtrusive
negative consequences.
Keywords :
trauma – disaster – health anxiety –reassurance – epidemiology
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)