Gareayaghi Aila, Tatlıdil Elif, Şişman Ezgi, Polat Aslıhan
Department of Psychiatry, Kocaeli University Research and Application Hospital, 41001 Kabaoğlu, Turkey.
Department of Psychiatry, Kocaeli City Hospital, 41060 İzmit, Turkey.
Medicina (Kaunas). 2025 Jun 17;61(6):1097. doi: 10.3390/medicina61061097.
On 6 February 2023, two catastrophic earthquakes struck southeastern Türkiye, affecting over 13 million individuals and causing widespread destruction. While the physical damage was immediate, the psychological consequences-particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and depression-have proven long-lasting. This study aimed to evaluate the severity and course of PTSD symptoms among survivors and to examine the effectiveness of a telepsychiatry-based mental health intervention in a post-disaster setting. This naturalistic, observational study included 153 adult participants from the affected regions who underwent at least two telepsychiatry sessions between the first and sixth month post-disaster. Initial screening was conducted using the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12), and individuals scoring ≥ 13 were further assessed with the PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version (PCL-C) and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Follow-up evaluations and pharmacological or psychoeducational interventions were offered as clinically indicated. At the one-month follow-up, 94.4% of participants met the threshold for PTSD symptoms (PCL-C > 22) and 77.6% had severe depressive symptoms (BDI > 30). By the sixth month, PTSD symptoms had significantly decreased (mean PCL-C score reduced from 42.47 ± 12.22 to 33.02 ± 12.23, < 0.001). Greater symptom reduction was associated with higher educational attainment and perceived social support, while prior trauma predicted poorer outcomes. Depression severity emerged as the strongest predictor of chronic PTSD. This study highlights the psychological burden following the 2023 earthquakes in Türkiye and demonstrates the feasibility and potential effectiveness of telepsychiatry in disaster mental health care. Integrating digital mental health services into disaster response systems may help reach vulnerable populations and improve long-term psychological recovery.
2023年2月6日,土耳其东南部发生了两次灾难性地震,超过1300万人受到影响,造成了广泛的破坏。虽然身体损伤是直接的,但心理后果——尤其是创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和抑郁症——已被证明具有长期影响。本研究旨在评估幸存者中PTSD症状的严重程度和病程,并检验基于远程精神病学的心理健康干预在灾后环境中的有效性。这项自然主义的观察性研究纳入了153名来自受灾地区的成年参与者,他们在灾后第一个月至第六个月期间至少接受了两次远程精神病学诊疗。最初使用一般健康问卷(GHQ - 12)进行筛查,得分≥13的个体进一步使用PTSD检查表 - 民用版(PCL - C)和贝克抑郁量表(BDI)进行评估。根据临床指征提供随访评估以及药物或心理教育干预。在1个月的随访中,94.4%的参与者达到了PTSD症状阈值(PCL - C > 22),77.6%有严重抑郁症状(BDI > 30)。到第六个月时,PTSD症状显著减轻(PCL - C平均得分从42.47±12.22降至33.02±12.23,<0.001)。症状减轻幅度更大与更高的教育程度和感知到的社会支持相关联,而既往创伤预示着更差的结果。抑郁严重程度成为慢性PTSD最强的预测因素。本研究突出了2023年土耳其地震后的心理负担,并证明了远程精神病学在灾难心理健康护理中的可行性和潜在有效性。将数字心理健康服务整合到灾难应对系统中可能有助于接触到弱势群体并改善长期心理恢复。