Master of Public Health Program, Faculty of Medicine, Kandahar University, Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Neuropsychiatric and Behavioral Science Department, Faculty of Medicine, Kandahar University, Kandahar, Afghanistan.
Sci Rep. 2023 Mar 10;13(1):3994. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-31228-0.
The last 4 decades of conflict in Afghanistan resulted in incalculable deaths, injuries, and millions of displacements. Although there are routine reports on casualties of the warfare, the information on its long-term psycho-social sequelae is somehow discounted. This study aimed to assess post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) probability and its associated factors among parents who live in Kandahar, the southern province of Afghanistan, and lost at least one child to armed conflict. We conducted a health-facility-based cross-sectional study involving 474 bereaved parents in Kandahar province from November/2020 to January/2021. The questionnaire was composed of sections on socio-demographic characteristics and mental and medical histories of the parent, features of the traumatic event and the time elapsed since then, age and gender of the lost child, and PCL-5. We performed multivariable logistic analysis to determine factors associated with PTSD probability in such parents. A staggering number of the parents (430; 90.72%) scored > 33 on PCL-5 denoting presence of probable PTSD. We noticed that several attributes of the bereaved parents (rural residence [AOR = 3.71 (95% CI 1.37-9.97)], older age [AOR = 2.41 (95% CI 1.03-5.57)], experiencing more than one traumatic event [AOR = 2.91 (95% CI 1.05-7.94)], pre-existing medical condition [AOR = 3.5 (95% CI 1.55-8.05)], and losing a < 5-years-old child [AOR = 2.38 (95% CI 1.16-4.70)] were significantly associated with PTSD probability. We assert that a very high number of bereaved parents are susceptible to probable PTSD. This finding signifies the eminent necessity of mental health services in such settings and provides implicit insights to relevant humanitarian assistance providers.
在过去的 40 年里,阿富汗的冲突造成了无数的死亡、伤害和数百万人流离失所。尽管经常有关于战争伤亡的报告,但关于其长期心理社会后果的信息却被忽视了。本研究旨在评估生活在阿富汗南部坎大哈省、因武装冲突失去至少一名子女的父母患创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的可能性及其相关因素。我们于 2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 1 月在坎大哈省进行了一项基于卫生机构的横断面研究,共纳入 474 名失去子女的父母。问卷包括父母的社会人口特征和精神及医疗史、创伤事件的特征及其发生时间、失去孩子的年龄和性别,以及 PCL-5。我们进行了多变量逻辑分析,以确定与这些父母 PTSD 可能性相关的因素。令人震惊的是,大多数父母(430 人;90.72%)在 PCL-5 上的得分>33,表明存在可能的 PTSD。我们注意到,一些失去子女的父母的特征(农村居住[优势比(AOR)=3.71(95%置信区间 1.37-9.97)],年龄较大[AOR=2.41(95%置信区间 1.03-5.57)],经历过不止一次创伤事件[AOR=2.91(95%置信区间 1.05-7.94)],原有疾病[AOR=3.5(95%置信区间 1.55-8.05)],失去 5 岁以下的孩子[AOR=2.38(95%置信区间 1.16-4.70)])与 PTSD 可能性显著相关。我们断言,大量失去子女的父母容易患 PTSD。这一发现表明,这种情况下急需心理健康服务,并为相关人道主义援助提供者提供了隐含的见解。