Munjiza Jasna, Britvic Dolores, Radman Maja, Crawford Mike J
Centre for Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Imperial College London, Hammersmith Campus, 7th Floor Commonwealth Building, Du Cane Road, London, W12 0NN, UK.
Central and North West London NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2017 Mar 21;17(1):100. doi: 10.1186/s12888-017-1269-3.
Exposure to war-related trauma has long been recognised to have an adverse effect on mental health. We attempted to investigate whether people who have clinically significant personality-related problems 15 years after a war are more likely to have been exposed to severe war-related trauma than those who do not have significant personality difficulties.
A case -control study was conducted in southern Croatia, fifteen years after the 1991-1995 war. We recruited 268 participants: 182 cases who scored positively on the International Personality Disorder Examination scale (IPDE), and 86 controls who were IPDE negative. Severity of war-related trauma was assessed according to the 17 items on the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ) trauma event scale, which were considered to be of severe (catastrophic) nature based on the ICD-10 description of catastrophic trauma and the opinion of trauma experts. All participants also completed measures of mental health (depression, anxiety and PTSD), social functioning and current substance misuse.
Cases (IPDE positive) were eight times more likely to report exposure to severe war-related trauma than controls. This association increased after adjustments for demographic factors (OR = 10.1, 95% CI 5.0 to 20.4). The types of severe trauma most frequently reported were either the participants'own life being in direct danger or witnessing extreme violence inflicted on others or the result of violence towards others (murder, torture, seeing burned or disfigured bodies). Prevalences of depression, anxiety and PTSD were high among IPDE positive participants 15 years after exposure to war trauma. Their level of interpersonal dysfunction was considerably higher than that in controls (OR = 10.39, 95% CI 3.51 to 30.75). Alcohol consumption in cases was significantly higher with a mean of 14.24 units per week (sd = 11.03) when compared to controls whose mean number of alcohol units was 9.24 (sd = 7.25), t (73) = 2.16, p < 0.05, mean difference 4.99 (95% CI = 0.39 to 9.60). Similarly, a significantly higher number of cases reported current substance misuse (8.2% vs. 0.0%) X (1, n = 268) = 7.51, p < 0.05).
Exposure to severe war-related trauma is a risk factor for interpersonal dysfunction15 years after people were exposed to an armed conflict. These findings have implications for assessing and meeting the long-term mental health needs of people in war-affected regions. Further research needs to be done to increase our understanding about the relationship between severe war trauma and personality related problems.
长期以来,人们认识到经历与战争相关的创伤会对心理健康产生不利影响。我们试图调查在战争结束15年后,临床上存在显著人格相关问题的人是否比没有明显人格困难的人更有可能遭受与战争相关的严重创伤。
在1991 - 1995年战争结束15年后,于克罗地亚南部进行了一项病例对照研究。我们招募了268名参与者:182例在国际人格障碍检查表(IPDE)上得分呈阳性的病例,以及86例IPDE阴性的对照。根据哈佛创伤问卷(HTQ)创伤事件量表上的17个项目评估与战争相关创伤的严重程度,基于国际疾病分类第10版(ICD - 10)对灾难性创伤的描述以及创伤专家的意见,这些项目被认为具有严重(灾难性)性质。所有参与者还完成了心理健康(抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激障碍)、社会功能以及当前物质滥用情况的测量。
病例组(IPDE阳性)报告遭受与战争相关严重创伤的可能性是对照组的8倍。在对人口统计学因素进行调整后,这种关联有所增加(比值比[OR] = 10.1,95%置信区间[CI]为5.0至20.4)。最常报告的严重创伤类型包括参与者自身生命处于直接危险中,或目睹他人遭受极端暴力,或他人遭受暴力的后果(谋杀、酷刑、看到烧伤或毁容的尸体)。在接触战争创伤15年后,IPDE阳性参与者中抑郁、焦虑和创伤后应激障碍的患病率很高。他们的人际功能障碍水平明显高于对照组(OR = 10.39,95% CI为3.51至30.75)。病例组的酒精消费量显著更高,平均每周14.24单位(标准差[sd] = 11.03),而对照组的酒精单位平均数为9.24(sd = 7.25),t(73) = 2.16,p < 0.05,平均差异为4.99(95% CI = 0.39至9.60)。同样,报告当前存在物质滥用的病例数量显著更多(8.2%对0.0%),X(1, n = 268) = 7.51,p < 0.05。
经历与战争相关的严重创伤是人们在经历武装冲突15年后出现人际功能障碍的一个风险因素。这些发现对于评估和满足受战争影响地区人们的长期心理健康需求具有重要意义。需要进一步开展研究,以增进我们对严重战争创伤与人格相关问题之间关系的理解。