Maguen Shira, Madden Erin, Neylan Thomas C, Cohen Beth E, Bertenthal Daniel, Seal Karen H
The authors are with the San Francisco VA Medical Center, where Dr. Maguen, Ms. Madden, and Dr. Neylan are with the Department of Mental Health, Dr. Cohen and Dr. Seal are with the Department of Medicine, and Mr. Bertenthal is with the Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Centers (e-mail:
Psychiatr Serv. 2014 Dec 1;65(12):1414-9. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.201300453. Epub 2014 Oct 31.
This study examined demographic, military, temporal, and logistic variables associated with improvement of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who received mental health outpatient treatment from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) health care system. The authors sought to determine whether time between last deployment and initiating mental health treatment was associated with a lack of improvement in PTSD symptoms.
The authors conducted a retrospective analysis of existing medical records of Iraq and Afghanistan veterans who enrolled in VA health care, received a postdeployment PTSD diagnosis, and initiated treatment for one or more mental health problems between October 1, 2007, and December 31, 2011, and whose records contained results of PTSD screening at the start of treatment and approximately one year later (N=39,690).
At the start of treatment, 75% of veterans diagnosed as having PTSD had a positive PTSD screen. At follow-up, 27% of those with a positive screen at baseline had improved, and 43% of those with a negative screen at baseline remained negative. A negative PTSD screen at follow-up was associated with female gender, older age, white race, having never married, officer rank, non-Army service, closer proximity to the nearest VA facility, and earlier initiation of treatment after the end of the last deployment.
Interventions to reduce delays in initiating mental health treatment may improve veterans' treatment response. Further studies are needed to test interventions for particular veteran subgroups who were less likely than others to improve with treatment.
本研究调查了与从美国退伍军人事务部(VA)医疗系统接受心理健康门诊治疗的伊拉克和阿富汗退伍军人创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)改善情况相关的人口统计学、军事、时间和后勤变量。作者试图确定上次部署与开始心理健康治疗之间的时间间隔是否与PTSD症状改善不足有关。
作者对2007年10月1日至2011年12月31日期间参加VA医疗保健、被诊断为部署后患有PTSD并开始治疗一种或多种心理健康问题的伊拉克和阿富汗退伍军人的现有医疗记录进行了回顾性分析,这些退伍军人的记录包含治疗开始时和大约一年后的PTSD筛查结果(N = 39,690)。
在治疗开始时,75%被诊断患有PTSD的退伍军人PTSD筛查呈阳性。在随访中,基线筛查呈阳性的患者中有27%有所改善,基线筛查呈阴性的患者中有43%仍为阴性。随访时PTSD筛查呈阴性与女性、年龄较大、白人种族、从未结婚、军官军衔、非陆军服役、距离最近的VA设施较近以及上次部署结束后更早开始治疗有关。
减少开始心理健康治疗延迟的干预措施可能会改善退伍军人的治疗反应。需要进一步研究来测试针对那些治疗改善可能性低于其他人群的特定退伍军人亚组的干预措施。