| Literature DB >> 24334161 |
Anthony J Rosellini1, Scott F Coffey2, Melissa Tracy3, Sandro Galea3.
Abstract
The present study applied latent class analysis to a sample of 810 participants residing in southern Mississippi at the time of Hurricane Katrina to determine if people would report distinct, meaningful PTSD symptom classes following a natural disaster. We found a four-class solution that distinguished persons on the basis of PTSD symptom severity/pervasiveness (Severe, Moderate, Mild, and Negligible Classes). Multinomial logistic regression models demonstrated that membership in the Severe and Moderate Classes was associated with potentially traumatic hurricane-specific experiences (e.g., being physically injured, seeing dead bodies), pre-hurricane traumatic events, co-occurring depression symptom severity and suicidal ideation, certain religious beliefs, and post-hurricane stressors (e.g., social support). Collectively, the findings suggest that more severe/pervasive typologies of natural disaster PTSD may be predicted by the frequency and severity of exposure to stressful/traumatic experiences (before, during, and after the disaster), co-occurring psychopathology, and specific internal beliefs.Entities:
Keywords: Hurricane Katrina; Latent class analysis; Natural disaster; PTSD; Trauma
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24334161 PMCID: PMC3951614 DOI: 10.1016/j.janxdis.2013.11.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anxiety Disord ISSN: 0887-6185