Abramson David, Stehling-Ariza Tasha, Garfield Richard, Redlener Irwin
National Center for Disaster Preparedness, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 722 W 168th St, Room 1014, New York, NY 10032, USA.
Disaster Med Public Health Prep. 2008 Jun;2(2):77-86. doi: 10.1097/DMP.0b013e318173a8e7.
Catastrophic disasters often are associated with massive structural, economic, and population devastation; less understood are the long-term mental health consequences. This study measures the prevalence and predictors of mental health distress and disability of hurricane survivors over an extended period of recovery in a postdisaster setting.
A representative sample of 1077 displaced or greatly affected households was drawn in 2006 using a stratified cluster sampling of federally subsidized emergency housing settings in Louisiana and Mississippi, and of Mississippi census tracts designated as having experienced major damage from Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Two rounds of data collection were conducted: a baseline face-to-face interview at 6 to 12 months post-Katrina, and a telephone follow-up at 20 to 23 months after the disaster. Mental health disability was measured using the Medical Outcome Study Short Form 12, version 2 mental component summary score. Bivariate and multivariate analyses were conducted examining socioeconomic, demographic, situational, and attitudinal factors associated with mental health distress and disability.
More than half of the cohort at both baseline and follow-up reported significant mental health distress. Self-reported poor health and safety concerns were persistently associated with poorer mental health. Nearly 2 years after the disaster, the greatest predictors of poor mental health included situational characteristics such as greater numbers of children in a household and attitudinal characteristics such as fatalistic sentiments and poor self-efficacy. Informal social support networks were associated significantly with better mental health status. Housing and economic circumstances were not independently associated with poorer mental health.
Mental health distress and disability are pervasive issues among the US Gulf Coast adults and children who experienced long-term displacement or other serious effects as a result of Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. As time progresses postdisaster, social and psychological factors may play greater roles in accelerating or impeding recovery among affected populations. Efforts to expand disaster recovery and preparedness policies to include long-term social re-engagement efforts postdisaster should be considered as a means of reducing mental health sequelae.
灾难性灾难往往伴随着大规模的结构破坏、经济损失和人口伤亡;而其对长期心理健康的影响却鲜为人知。本研究旨在测量灾难后长期恢复过程中飓风幸存者心理健康困扰及残疾的患病率和预测因素。
2006年,采用分层整群抽样方法,从路易斯安那州和密西西比州联邦补贴的紧急住房环境以及2005年被指定为遭受卡特里娜飓风重大破坏的密西西比州人口普查区中,选取了1077户流离失所或受严重影响的家庭作为代表性样本。进行了两轮数据收集:卡特里娜飓风过后6至12个月进行基线面对面访谈,灾难发生后20至23个月进行电话随访。使用医学结局研究简明健康调查问卷第2版心理成分汇总评分来测量心理健康残疾情况。进行了双变量和多变量分析,以检验与心理健康困扰和残疾相关的社会经济、人口统计学、情境和态度因素。
在基线和随访时,超过一半的队列报告有显著的心理健康困扰。自我报告的健康状况不佳和安全担忧一直与较差的心理健康相关。灾难发生近2年后,心理健康不佳的最大预测因素包括情境特征,如家庭中孩子数量较多,以及态度特征,如宿命论情绪和自我效能感差。非正式社会支持网络与更好的心理健康状况显著相关。住房和经济状况与较差的心理健康没有独立关联。
心理健康困扰和残疾是美国墨西哥湾沿岸因卡特里娜飓风和丽塔飓风而经历长期流离失所或其他严重影响的成年人及儿童中普遍存在的问题。随着灾后时间的推移,社会和心理因素可能在加速或阻碍受影响人群的恢复方面发挥更大作用。应考虑扩大灾难恢复和备灾政策,将灾后长期社会重新融入努力纳入其中,作为减少心理健康后遗症的一种手段。