Literature DB >> 15912748

[Mental health status and effects on daily life of patients of a large outbreak of Legionnaires Disease].

Kurumi Tsuruta1, Yoshinori Fujii, Hitomi Maeda, Tazuko Murakata, Takahiko Kato.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to survey mental health status among patients of a large outbreak of Legionnaires Disease (LD) occurring at a public bath in Hyuga City, Miyazaki Prefecture, from June through July, 2002. It also aimed to provide a basis for establishing a mental health care support system for persons suffering from ill health.
METHODS: Some 295 patients were reported by medical institutions to public health centers as being infected with LD or having suspected infection after using a hot springs bath, where hygiene was assumed to be maintained by regular water circulation, from 6/20 through 7/23, 2002 in Hyuga City, Miyazaki Prefecture. A total of 153 subjects consented to interviews after being informed of the objectives. They were visited and interviewed with a questionnaire from 10/12 through 12/5, 2002. Questions about mental health were written to identify "feeling stressed", based on diagnostic criteria for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) as noted in the DSM-IV. The Japanese version of the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ28) was used to identify high risk subjects for mental disorder, as well as the following four symptoms: "somatic symptoms", "anxiety and insomnia", "social dysfunction", and "severe depression". Factors associated with these were assessed with regard to knowledge and/or information about LD and its effects on daily life.
RESULTS: Regarding mental health, 27 (17.6%) were "feeling stressed". High risk patients for mental disorder numbered 39 (25.5%) according to the GHQ28. Patients with "somatic symptoms" numbered 44 (28.8%), those with "anxiety and insomnia" 21 (13.7%), those with "social dysfunction" 18 (11.8%) and with "severe depression" 5 (3.3%). Among the effects on daily life, "changes of human relationships" was related with "feeling stressed" in those suspected of LD infections (P = 0.022). High risk was related to "economic support" (P = 0.009) in LD, and also to "cause and survey" (P = 0.035) in those cases suspected of LD.
CONCLUSIONS: At 3 to 4 months after the outbreak, the patients still exhibited mental health problems. Therefore we should provide health and social support that deals with the factors identified on a longer-term or continuous basis.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15912748

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nihon Koshu Eisei Zasshi        ISSN: 0546-1766


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