Schneider Anna, Conrad Daniela, Pfeiffer Anett, Elbert Thomas, Kolassa Iris-Tatjana, Wilker Sarah
Department of Clinical & Biological Psychology, Institute of Psychology and Education, Ulm University, Ulm, Germany.
Vivo International e.V., Konstanz, Germany.
Front Psychiatry. 2018 Oct 10;9:423. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00423. eCollection 2018.
Studies in conflict population have repeatedly documented that the number of traumatic event types experienced (trauma load) increases the risk to develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a dose-dependent manner. Misconceptions about survivors' experiences and actions during the war, as well as mental health symptoms frequently lead to stigmatization by their own families and the community, which might render them even more vulnerable for PTSD development and prevent successful recovery. We therefore investigated whether stigmatization affects trauma-related psychopathology beyond the well-known effect of trauma load. The study sample comprised = 1131 survivors of the rebel war led by the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) in Northern Uganda, including a large proportion of formerly abducted individuals and child soldiers. We investigated how the experience of stigmatization affects PTSD risk and the likelihood of spontaneous remission, taking trauma load into account. Further, the association of stigmatization with treatment outcome was determined in a subsample of = 284 individuals with PTSD who received trauma-focused psychotherapy. More than one third of the total sample, and almost two-thirds of the therapy subsample, reported experiences of stigmatization. The main reasons for stigmatization were related to an association with a rebel group (e.g., being called a rebel), followed by mental health problems/PTSD symptoms and HIV/AIDS. Stigmatization was strongly associated with a higher prevalence of lifetime and current PTSD, a diminished probability of spontaneous remission and higher PTSD symptoms before and after trauma-focused psychotherapy, beyond the effect of trauma load. In sum, our results support the assumption that stigmatization aggravates trauma-related psychopathology and impede symptom improvement. In post-conflict regions, community and family interventions which aim at reducing stigmatization and discrimination might therefore complement individual psychotherapy in order to allow survivors to recover and reintegrate into society.
针对冲突地区人群的研究反复证明,经历的创伤事件类型数量(创伤负荷)会以剂量依赖的方式增加患创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险。对战时幸存者经历和行为的误解以及心理健康症状,常常导致他们遭到家人和社区的污名化,这可能使他们更容易患上创伤后应激障碍,并阻碍其成功康复。因此,我们调查了污名化是否会在创伤负荷的已知影响之外,对创伤相关的精神病理学产生影响。研究样本包括1131名乌干达北部受上帝抵抗军(LRA)领导的叛乱战争的幸存者,其中很大一部分是曾被绑架的个人和儿童兵。我们在考虑创伤负荷的情况下,调查了污名化经历如何影响创伤后应激障碍的风险和自然缓解的可能性。此外,在接受以创伤为重点的心理治疗的284名创伤后应激障碍患者的子样本中,确定了污名化与治疗结果之间的关联。超过三分之一的总样本,以及近三分之二的治疗子样本报告有污名化经历。污名化的主要原因与与反叛组织有关联(例如,被称为反叛者)有关,其次是心理健康问题/创伤后应激障碍症状和艾滋病毒/艾滋病。除创伤负荷的影响外,污名化与终生和当前创伤后应激障碍的较高患病率、自然缓解概率降低以及在以创伤为重点的心理治疗前后较高的创伤后应激障碍症状密切相关。总之,我们的结果支持这样一种假设,即污名化会加剧创伤相关的精神病理学,并阻碍症状改善。因此,在冲突后地区,旨在减少污名化和歧视的社区和家庭干预措施可能会补充个体心理治疗,以使幸存者能够康复并重新融入社会。