Department of Mental Health, Graduate School of Medicine, The University of Tokyo, 7-3-1 Hongo Bunkyo-ku, Tokyo, 113-0033, Japan.
Department of Hygiene and Preventive Medicine, Iwate Medical University School of Medicine, 1-1-1 Idaidori, Yahaba-cho, Shiwa-gun, Iwate, 028-3694, Japan.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Aug 20;20(1):1271. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09378-x.
People living in temporary housing for long periods after a disaster are at risk of poor mental health. This study investigated the post-disaster incidence and remission of common mental disorders among adults living in temporary housing for the 3 years following the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake.
Three years after the disaster, face-to-face interviews were conducted with 1089 adult residents living in temporary housing in the disaster area, i.e., the shelter group, and a random sample of 852 community residents from non-disaster areas of East Japan. The World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview was used to diagnose DSM-IV mood, anxiety, and alcohol use disorders. Information on demographic variables and disaster experiences was also collected.
Response rates were 49 and 46% for the shelter group and the community residents, respectively. The incidence of mood/anxiety disorder in the shelter group was elevated only in the first year post-disaster compared to that of the general population. The rate of remission for mood and anxiety disorders was significantly lower in the shelter group than in the community residents. The proportion seeking medical treatment was higher in the shelter group.
The onset of common mental disorders increased in the first year, but then levelled off in the following years among residents in temporary housing after the disaster. Remission from incident post-disaster mental disorders was slower in the shelter group than in the general population. Post-disaster mental health service could consider the greater incidence in the first year and prolonged remission of mental disorders among survivors with a long-term stay in temporary housing after a disaster.
在灾难后长期居住在临时住房中的人们面临着心理健康状况不佳的风险。本研究调查了 2011 年东日本大地震后 3 年内居住在临时住房中的成年人常见精神障碍的灾后发生率和缓解率。
在灾难发生 3 年后,对灾区临时住房中的 1089 名成年居民(即避难所组)和来自东日本非灾区的 852 名社区居民进行了面对面访谈。采用世界卫生组织复合国际诊断访谈对 DSM-IV 心境、焦虑和酒精使用障碍进行诊断。还收集了人口统计学变量和灾难经历的信息。
避难所组和社区居民的应答率分别为 49%和 46%。与一般人群相比,避难所组的心境/焦虑障碍发生率仅在灾后第一年升高。避难所组心境和焦虑障碍的缓解率明显低于社区居民。寻求医疗的比例在避难所组更高。
在灾难后,临时住房中的居民常见精神障碍的发病在第一年增加,但随后在随后的几年中趋于平稳。与一般人群相比,避难所组灾后新发精神障碍的缓解速度较慢。灾后心理健康服务可以考虑在灾难后临时住房中长期居住的幸存者中,精神障碍的第一年发生率更高,缓解时间更长。