| Literature DB >> 22778930 |
Shirley Telles1, Nilkamal Singh, Acharya Balkrishna.
Abstract
There are many and varied types of trauma. The extent to which trauma influences the mental health of an individual depends on the nature of trauma, as well as on the individual's coping capabilities. Often trauma is followed by depression, anxiety, and PTSD. As the pharmacological remedies for these conditions often have undesirable side-effects, nonpharmacological remedies are thought of as a possible add-on treatment. Yoga is one such mind-body intervention. This paper covers eleven studies indexed in PubMed, in which mental health disorders resulting from trauma were managed through yoga including meditation. The aim was to evaluate the use of yoga in managing trauma-related depression, anxiety, PTSD and physiological stress following exposure to natural calamities, war, interpersonal violence, and incarceration in a correctional facility. An attempt has also been made to explore possible mechanisms underlying benefits seen. As most of these studies were not done on persons exposed to trauma that had practiced yoga, this is a definite area for further research.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22778930 PMCID: PMC3388328 DOI: 10.1155/2012/401513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Depress Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1321
Summary of the twelve studies reviewed
| Sl. Number | Category of trauma | Sample: (1) Age, (2) Gender, (3) | Study design | Assessment tools and their reliability/validity | Statistics | Effect sizes | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (1) | Natural disaster (tsunami) | (1) 28–50 years | Single group longitudinal design with before, after (7 day yoga program) | (i) Linear analog scales for fear, anxiety, disturbed sleep, and sadness (the reliability and validity has not been established), | Paired | Not reported | (i) Absence of a control group, (ii) use of scales whose reliability and validity had not been established, and (iii) short duration of the intervention. |
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| (2) | Natural disaster (tsunami) (Location: South-east coast of India) [ | (1) 18–65 years | Allocation (non random) to 3 groups (a) yoga breath intervention, (b) yoga breath intervention followed by trauma reduction exposure technique, and (c) a wait list control. | (i) The PTSD check list-17 (PCL-17). | Three factor ANOVA, with | Not reported | Allocation to the 3 groups was not random |
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| (3) | Natural disaster (Hurricane Katrina) (Location: New Orleans, U.S.A.) [ | (1) 31–67 years | (i) Single group | (i) PTSD checklist-Specific version (PCL-S) | Intention-to-treat regression analysis and one sample | PCL-S ( | (i) Small sample size and (ii) absence of a control group |
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| (4) | Natural disaster (floods) (Location: Bihar, India) [ | (1) 15–85 years | Cross sectional single group study evaluating risk for PTSD and depression in different age groups | Screening questionnaire for disaster mental health (SQD) with known reliability and validity | Two factor ANOVAs followed by | Not reported | Confounding variables which could influence susceptibility other than age and gender were not reported |
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| (5) | Natural disaster (floods) (Location: Bihar, India) [ | (1) 20–40 years | (i) Randomized controlled study | (i) Linear analog scales to assess fear, anxiety, disturbed sleep and sadness, (ii) heart rate variability based on electrocardiogram, and (iii) breath rate. | Paired | Not reported | (i) Small sample size and |
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| (6) | Exposure to combat and terrorism (Location: Kosovo) [ | (1) 12 to 19 years | (i) Single group. | (i) PTSD reaction Index | Paired | Effect size for group 1 ( | Absence of a control group |
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| (7) | Exposure to combat and terrorism (Location: Kosovo) [ | (1) 12–19 years | (i) Randomized control study | Harvard trauma questionnaire (valid and reliable) | Repeated measures ANOVA | Not obtained possibly reported | NIL |
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| (8) | Exposure to combat and terrorism (Location: Israel) [ | (1) 8–12 years | (i) Single group | (i) WHO well being index | (i) Wilcoxon paired signed ranked test | Not reported | Absence of a control group |
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| (9) | Exposure to combat and terrorism (Location: Bali) [ | (1) 6–12 years | (i) Single blind, randomized control design. | Not obtained | Not obtained | Not obtained | Numbers in the 2 groups were unequal (i.e., 48 in the SHAT group compared to 178 in the control) this is not usual in a randomized control design |
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| (10) | Exposure to combat and terrorism as well as tsunami (Location: Sri Lanka) [ | (1) 8–14 years | Randomized to 2 interventions, before, after (1, 6 months) | (i) (UCLA PTSD index for DSM-IV. | Repeated measures ANOVA and chi-square tests | Effect Sizes (i) KIDNET 1.76 (one month post test), 1.96 (6 months post test) (ii) MED-RELAX 1.83 (one month post test), 2.20 (6 month post test) | (i) Absence of a no intervention control group. |
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| (11) | Interpersonal violence (Location: Baltimore City, U.S.A.) [ | (1) 9–11 years | Randomized control before, after (12 weeks) assessments | (i) Response to stress questionnaire. (ii) The short mood and feelings questionnaire: Child version for depressive symptoms. | (i) ANOVA for continuous variables. | Effect sizes were calculated for Emotional profile positive affect ( | Recruitment may have involved highly motivated students with enthusiastic parents (the self-report measures may have been influenced by bias |
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| (12) | Youth in a correctional facility (Location: Bangalore, India) [ | (1) 12–16 years | Matched pair allocation to intervention and control groups (pairs were matched for age and duration of stay in the community home), before, after (6 months) assessments | (i) Heart rate from the electrocardiogram. | Wilcoxon paired—sample tests | Not reported | (i) The small sample |