Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa.
J Trauma Stress. 2021 Oct;34(5):1061-1067. doi: 10.1002/jts.22746. Epub 2021 Oct 12.
The papers in this Journal of Traumatic Stress special issue on disproportionate adversity cover the gamut of discrimination traumas and stressors, including microaggressions, a more insidious forms of discrimination, and their often-devastating and wide-ranging mental health sequelae, in disproportionately affected disenfranchised groups. Discrimination based on race, ethnicity, gender, and sexual orientation commonly confers cumulative and chronic effects. In the field of traumatic stress studies, several types of identity-linked traumatic events have been identified and empirically investigated as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)-producing experiences. Collectively, the 13 papers included in this special issue raise questions about the definition, conceptualization, and categorization of various forms of explicit and implicit identity-linked trauma. These papers highlight the need for acceptance of a shared nomenclature and better differentiation of both causal and correlational associations with acute and chronic PTSD, depression, suicide risk, alcohol misuse, and other mental health outcomes. In this commentary, the discussion is extended to COVID-19, a disease that has been globally devastating for many. On multiple levels (i.e., physical, mental, emotional, economic, and social), COVID-19 has magnified the prepandemic fault lines of race, ethnicity, gender, gender identity, and sexual orientation. Applying a syndemic framework to the health impact of COVID-19 and, arguably, the most pervasive identity linked epidemic worldwide-systemic racism-brings perspective to the biological and social forces that are likely to be driving the convergence of COVID-19, systemic racism, and chronic health inequities, and may be informative in guiding evidence-based strategies for managing racial trauma in the context of COVID-19.
本期《创伤应激杂志》特刊中的论文涵盖了各种歧视创伤和应激源,包括微侵犯,一种更阴险的歧视形式,以及它们经常造成的破坏性和广泛的心理健康后果,在受歧视和被剥夺权利的群体中更为严重。基于种族、族裔、性别和性取向的歧视通常会产生累积和慢性影响。在创伤应激研究领域,已经确定并实证研究了几种与身份相关的创伤性事件,这些事件被认为是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)产生的经历。本特刊中收录的 13 篇论文共同提出了关于各种显性和隐性与身份相关的创伤的定义、概念化和分类的问题。这些论文强调需要接受一个共同的命名法,并更好地区分与急性和慢性 PTSD、抑郁、自杀风险、酒精滥用和其他心理健康结果相关的因果和相关关联。在这篇评论中,讨论扩展到了 COVID-19,这是一种对许多人造成全球性破坏的疾病。在多个层面上(即身体、心理、情感、经济和社会),COVID-19 放大了种族、族裔、性别、性别认同和性取向在大流行前的断层线。将综合征框架应用于 COVID-19 的健康影响,以及可以说是全球最普遍的与身份相关的流行病——系统性种族主义,为理解可能导致 COVID-19、系统性种族主义和慢性健康不平等趋同的生物和社会力量提供了视角,并可能为在 COVID-19 背景下管理种族创伤提供基于证据的策略提供信息。