Rural Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia
Rural Clinical School, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2021 Apr 20;11(4):e040875. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-040875.
Trauma is reported by 70% of the global population and 4% of those exposed develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but data from Indigenous populations are limited. We aimed to determine the prevalence, types and age of occurrence of traumatic events among community-living Indigenous Australians and associations with PTSD.
Lifetime trauma and PTSD were quantified among a broadly representative sample of 544 Indigenous participants using a diagnostic clinical interview. Logistic regression examined predictors of PTSD.
Metropolitan, regional and remote areas of Southern Queensland and Northern New South Wales.
Indigenous Australians 18 years and older.
Prevalence of traumatic life events and risk of PTSD.
64.9% of participants (standardised prevalence 62.6%) reported lifetime trauma, with more than one trauma category in 62.3%. Females reported 2.3 times more sexual violence, otherwise no gender differences existed. The prevalence of four common trauma categories were 1.7-3.0 times higher than in the Australian population; physical violence being the highest relative risk. Although overall childhood trauma was not increased, sexual or physical violence before age 15 was twice more common than in the Australian population.The standardised prevalence of 12-month PTSD was 13.3% (95% CI 10.4 to 16.1), 16.1% (95% CI 12.2 to 19.9) in females and 8.2% (95% CI 5.3 to 11.1) in males, three times the Australian rates. In multiple regression analysis, independent predictors of PTSD were female gender (OR 2.1), rural residence (OR 3.0), trauma under age 10 (OR 2.2), sexual (without physical) violence (OR 2.5), physical (without sexual) violence (OR 2.3), and both sexual and physical violence (OR 5.0).
Indigenous Australians are more likely to experience potentially harmful traumas and develop PTSD than other Australians. Mitigation of trauma among Indigenous Australians, particularly childhood exposure and sexual or physical violence, is essential to reduce their high burden of PTSD.
全球 70%的人报告曾经历过创伤,其中 4%的人会发展为创伤后应激障碍(PTSD),但来自原住民群体的数据有限。我们旨在确定社区居住的澳大利亚原住民一生中经历创伤事件的发生率、类型和年龄,并探讨其与 PTSD 的关系。
使用诊断性临床访谈对来自昆士兰州南部和新南威尔士州北部的具有代表性的 544 名原住民参与者进行了一生中创伤和 PTSD 的定量研究。逻辑回归分析了 PTSD 的预测因素。
昆士兰州南部、新南威尔士州北部的城市、地区和偏远地区。
18 岁及以上的澳大利亚原住民。
创伤性生活事件的发生率和 PTSD 的发病风险。
64.9%的参与者(标准化发生率为 62.6%)报告一生中曾经历过创伤,其中 62.3%的参与者经历过不止一种创伤类型。女性报告的性暴力发生率是男性的两倍,其他性别差异并不存在。四种常见创伤类型的发生率比澳大利亚人群高 1.7-3.0 倍;身体暴力的相对风险最高。虽然总体上儿童期创伤没有增加,但 15 岁之前的性暴力或身体暴力是澳大利亚人群的两倍。12 个月 PTSD 的标准化发生率为 13.3%(95%CI 10.4-16.1),女性为 16.1%(95%CI 12.2-19.9),男性为 8.2%(95%CI 5.3-11.1),是澳大利亚人群的三倍。在多元回归分析中,PTSD 的独立预测因素包括女性(OR 2.1)、农村居住(OR 3.0)、10 岁以下的创伤(OR 2.2)、性暴力(无身体暴力)(OR 2.5)、身体暴力(无性暴力)(OR 2.3)和性暴力与身体暴力同时发生(OR 5.0)。
与其他澳大利亚人相比,澳大利亚原住民更有可能经历潜在有害的创伤事件,并发展为 PTSD。减轻原住民的创伤,特别是儿童时期的创伤和性暴力或身体暴力,对于降低他们 PTSD 的高负担至关重要。