Department of Health and Nutrition Sciences, Brooklyn College, City University of New York, Brooklyn, NY 11210, USA.
J Immigr Minor Health. 2013 Oct;15(5):890-7. doi: 10.1007/s10903-012-9696-1.
This study examined the predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a clinical sample of 875 immigrant survivors of political violence resettled in the United States, with a specific aim of comparing the relative predictive power of pre-migration and post-migration experiences. Results from a hierarchical OLS regression indicated that pre-migration experiences such as rape/sexual assault were significantly associated with worse PTSD outcomes, as were post-migration factors such as measures of financial and legal insecurity. Post-migration variables, which included immigration status in the US, explained significantly more variance in PTSD outcomes than premigration variables alone. Discussion focused on the importance of looking at postmigration living conditions when treating trauma in this population.
本研究调查了 875 名在美国重新安置的政治暴力移民幸存者临床样本中的创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的预测因素,目的是比较移民前和移民后经历的相对预测能力。分层 OLS 回归的结果表明,移民前的经历,如强奸/性侵犯,与更严重的 PTSD 结果显著相关,而移民后的因素,如经济和法律不安全的衡量标准,也是如此。包括在美国的移民身份在内的移民后变量,比仅移民前变量能更好地解释 PTSD 结果的差异。讨论集中在治疗这一人群的创伤时,关注移民后生活条件的重要性。