Zhang Yanqin, Workman Annabelle, Russell Melissa A, Williamson Michelle, Pan Haotai, Reifels Lennart
Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.
Melbourne Climate Futures, Melbourne Law School, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, Australia.
Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2022 Jun 28;13(1):2087980. doi: 10.1080/20008198.2022.2087980. eCollection 2022.
The long-term health effects of bushfires include the potential to trigger new and exacerbate existing mental health problems.
This review aimed to determine the prevalence of long-term mental health issues in Australian populations exposed to bushfires.
A systematic search was conducted in five databases (Embase, Medline, PsycINFO, Scopus, and Web of Science) to identify studies focusing on Australian populations impacted by bushfires with the prevalence of mental health issues reported at 2+ years after bushfire. The Joanna Briggs Institute prevalence critical appraisal tool was utilised. We conducted meta-analyses to determine the prevalence of general psychological distress in the general population, and a narrative synthesis.
We included 21 articles based on 5 studies and conducted on 3 bushfire events. Meta-analyses showed a pooled prevalence of 14% (95% CI 12%-16%) for psychological distress in the general population at 2-4 years post bushfire. The overall prevalence of long-term psychological problems in firefighters at 2-7 years ranged from 28% to 47.6%. The prevalence of some psychological issues decreased with time and was directly proportional to the level of bushfire impact.
As the magnitude of long-term bushfire-related mental health impacts in Australia is severe, it is important to monitor psychological problems and assist communities in future. Future research needs include: (a) more studies on the full range of long-term psychological impacts of bushfires, and (b) consensus on instruments and diagnostic criteria to define mental health issues.
First systematic review of long-term bushfire mental health issues in Australia.Indicating substantial mental health problems among affected populations.Long-term issues were linked to bushfire impact and elevated among firefighters.Highlighting need for further rigorous research on long-term disaster sequalae.
森林大火对健康的长期影响包括引发新的心理健康问题以及加剧现有心理健康问题的可能性。
本综述旨在确定澳大利亚受森林大火影响人群中长期心理健康问题的患病率。
在五个数据库(Embase、Medline、PsycINFO、Scopus和Web of Science)中进行系统检索,以识别关注受森林大火影响的澳大利亚人群且报告了森林大火发生两年及以后心理健康问题患病率的研究。采用了乔安娜·布里格斯研究所患病率关键评估工具。我们进行了荟萃分析以确定普通人群中一般心理困扰的患病率,并进行了叙述性综合分析。
我们纳入了基于5项研究的21篇文章,这些研究针对3次森林大火事件开展。荟萃分析显示,森林大火发生后2至4年,普通人群中心理困扰的合并患病率为14%(95%置信区间12%-16%)。消防员在2至7年中长期心理问题的总体患病率在28%至47.6%之间。一些心理问题的患病率随时间下降,且与森林大火的影响程度成正比。
由于澳大利亚与森林大火相关的长期心理健康影响程度严重,监测心理问题并在未来协助社区很重要。未来的研究需求包括:(a)对森林大火的全方位长期心理影响进行更多研究,以及(b)就定义心理健康问题的工具和诊断标准达成共识。
首次对澳大利亚森林大火心理健康长期问题进行系统综述。表明受影响人群中存在大量心理健康问题。长期问题与森林大火影响相关,且在消防员中更为突出。强调需要对长期灾难后遗症进行进一步严格研究。