Friedman Matthew J, Schnurr Paula P, Sengupta Anjana, Holmes Tamara, Ashcraft Marie
National Center for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (116D), Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center, 215 North Main St., White River Junction, VT 05009, USA.
J Nerv Ment Dis. 2004 Jan;192(1):42-50. doi: 10.1097/01.nmd.0000105999.57129.ee.
The Hawaii Vietnam Veterans Project (HVVP) was congressionally mandated as a follow-up to the National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study (NVVRS) to assess current and lifetime prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The Hawaii Vietnam Veterans Project used the original two-stage NVVRS design in which a lay interview, conducted with a large sample, was followed by a clinical interview with a smaller subsample. Reported results are from the clinical subsample consisting of 100 Native Hawaiian and 102 American of Japanese ancestry veterans compared with white veterans from the NVVRS cohort. The major finding is that veterans of Japanese ancestry exhibited significantly lower prevalence of current full, current partial, and lifetime full PTSD than white veterans. Adjustment for age and war zone exposure did not eliminate most of these differences. These results indicate that minority status per se is not a risk factor for PTSD.
夏威夷越战老兵项目(HVVP)是根据国会授权开展的,作为越南老兵全国再适应研究(NVVRS)的后续项目,旨在评估创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的当前及终生患病率。夏威夷越战老兵项目采用了NVVRS最初的两阶段设计,即先对大量样本进行非专业访谈,然后对较小的子样本进行临床访谈。报告的结果来自临床子样本,该子样本由100名夏威夷原住民和102名日裔美国退伍军人组成,并与NVVRS队列中的白人退伍军人进行了比较。主要发现是,日裔退伍军人当前完全型、当前部分型和终生完全型PTSD的患病率显著低于白人退伍军人。对年龄和战区暴露情况进行调整并不能消除这些差异中的大部分。这些结果表明,少数族裔身份本身并非PTSD的风险因素。