| Literature DB >> 25072043 |
Marina Widmann1, Abdulkadir Hussein Warsame2, Jan Mikulica1, Johannes von Beust1, Maimuna Mohamud Isse2, David Ndetei3, Mustafa al'Absi4, Michael G Odenwald5.
Abstract
In East-African and Arab countries, khat leaves are traditionally chewed in social settings. They contain the amphetamine-like alkaloid cathinone. Especially among Somali refugees, khat use has been associated with psychiatric symptoms. We assessed khat-use patterns and psychiatric symptoms among male Somali refugees living in a disadvantaged urban settlement area in Kenya, a large group that has not yet received scientific attention. We wanted to explore consume patterns and study the associations between khat use, traumatic experiences, and psychotic symptoms. Using privileged access sampling, we recruited 33 healthy male khat chewers and 15 comparable non-chewers. Based on extensive preparatory work, we assessed khat use, khat dependence according to DSM-IV, traumatic experiences, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and psychotic symptoms using standardized diagnostic instruments that had been adapted to the Somali language and culture. Hazardous use patterns like chewing for more than 24 h without interruption were frequently reported. All khat users fulfilled the DSM-IV-criteria for dependence and 85% reported functional khat use, i.e., that khat helps them to forget painful experiences. We found that the studied group was heavily burdened by traumatic events and posttraumatic symptoms. Khat users had experienced more traumatic events and had more often PTSD than non-users. Most khat users experience khat-related psychotic symptoms and in a quarter of them we found true psychotic symptoms. In contrast, among control group members no psychotic symptoms could be detected. We found first evidence for the existence and high prevalence of severely hazardous use patterns, comorbid psychiatric symptoms, and khat use as a self-medication of trauma-consequences among male Somali refugees in urban Kenyan refugee settlements. There is a high burden by psychopathology and adequate community-based interventions urgently need to be developed.Entities:
Keywords: PTSD; Somali refugees in Kenya; khat; khat-related psychosis; psychotic symptoms
Year: 2014 PMID: 25072043 PMCID: PMC4075009 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2014.00071
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Socio-demographic characteristic of respondents.
| Chewer | Non-chewer | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 33 | 15 | – | |
| Gender (male) | 100% | 100% | – |
| Age (mean, SD) | 34.0 (10.96) | 35.1 (15.71) | 0.672 |
| Marital status (married) | 51.5% (17) | 60.0% (9) | 0.584 |
| Education (with completed primary education) | 54.4% (18) | 46.7% (7) | 0.613 |
| Occupation (unemployed) | 72.7% (24) | 80.0% (12) | 0.728 |
| Proportion of refugees | 93.9% (31) | 100% (15) | 1.000 |
We report means and standard deviations or percentages and .
Patterns of khat use among chewers as well as among binge and non-binge chewers.
| All chewers (33) | Non-chewers (15) | Binge chewers (12) | Non-binge chewers (21) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Days of khat-consumption last week | 5.15 (2.08) | – | – | 5.33 (2.43) | 5.05 (1.91) | 0.710 |
| Average number of hours of khat-consumption per day last week | 10.23 (4.13) | – | – | 13.08 (4.27) | 8.60 (3.08) | 0.001 |
| Number of consumed traded units of khat last week | 16.47 (10.31) | – | – | 19.62 (11.32) | 14.67 (9.50) | 0.189 |
| Lifetime years chewed | 12.09 (10.34) | – | – | 13.67 (13.26) | 11.19 (8.49) | 0.517 |
| Age started chewing | 21.0 (6.53) | – | – | 22.67 (7.13) | 20.05 (6.14) | 0.274 |
| Functional khat use | 84.8% (28) | – | – | 100% (12) | 76.2% (16) | 0.133 |
| Nicotine use last year | 75.8% (25) | 3.8% (1) | <0.001 | 75.0% (9) | 76.2% (16) | 1.000 |
| Cigarettes per day last week | 9.43 (7.95) | 0 | <0.001 | 11.42 (8.55) | 8.30 (7.57) | 0.286 |
| Alcohol use last year | 12.1% (4) | 0% (0) | 0.294 | 16.7% (2) | 9.5% (2) | 0.610 |
| Tranquilizer use last year | 25% (8) | 0% (0) | 0.042 | 54.2% (6) | 9.5% (2) | 0.010 |
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We report means and standard deviations or percentages and .
DSM-IV criteria for substance dependence that were fulfilled in the sample of 33 khat users.
| DSM-IV criteria | Percentage ( |
|---|---|
| Tolerance | 66.7% (22) |
| Withdrawal | 94.0% (31) |
| More than intended | 72.7% (24) |
| Wish to reduce/stop | 78.8% (26) |
| Time consuming | 100% (33) |
| Reduced social life | 97.0% (32) |
| Continued consumption despite of health problems | 93.9% (31) |
Figure 1Comparison of psychopathology between chewers and non-chewers. (A) Number of traumatic experiences and PTSD symptoms and (B) number of true psychotic symptoms and khat-related psychotic symptoms. We report means and standard deviations.
Khat-use patterns in chewers with and without PTSD.
| Khat chewers | Khat chewers | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| with PTSD (9) | without PTSD (21) | ||
| Days of khat-consumption last week | 5.00 (2.60) | 5.19 (1.94) | 0.826 |
| Average number of hours of khat-consumption per day last week | 11.44 (4.61) | 9.45 (3.47) | 0.203 |
| Number of consumed traded units of khat last week | 17.40 (12.35) | 15.56 (9.30) | 0.656 |
| Lifetime years chewed | 11.67 (13.74) | 12.83 (10.48) | 0.798 |
| Age started chewing | 22.89 (8.19) | 20.87 (5.64) | 0.430 |
| Functional use | 100% (9) | 80.9% (17) | 0.218 |
| Binge khat use | 66.7% (6) | 14.3% (3) | 0.008 |
We report means and standard deviations or percentages and .
Psychotic symptoms among khat chewers.
| CIDI item | True psychotic symptoms among 33 khat chewers | Khat-related psychotic symptoms among 33 khat chewers |
|---|---|---|
| Do you believe that people are spying on you? (G1) | 6.1% (2) | 39.4% (13) |
| Do you believe that people are following you? (G2) | 9.1% (3) | 42.2% (14) |
| Do you think that people you see are talking or laughing at you? (G2b) | 6.1% (2) | 27.2% (9) |
| Do you believe that someone is plotting against you or trying to hurt or poison you? (G4) | 9.1% (3) | 27.3% (9) |
| Are you convinced that one of your wives is being unfaithful, although she told you that is not true (G6) | 6.1% (2) | 12.1% (4) |
| Are you convinced that you are under control of some power or force, so that your actions or thoughts are not your own or determined by someone else? (G10) | 9.1% (3) | 15.2% (5) |
| Do you believe that you are being sent special messages through television or the radio or that the program had been arranged just for you alone? (G13) | 0% (0) | 3.0% (1) |
| Do you feel that strange or magic forces are working on you? (G14) | 3.0% (1) | 3.0% (1) |
| Can you sometimes see something or someone that others who are present cannot see – that is, do you sometimes have visions when you are completely awake? (G17) | 6.1% (2) | 9.1% (3) |
| Does it sometimes happen that you can hear things other people can not hear? (G18) | 12.1% (4) | 21.2% (7) |
| Do you sometimes hear voices that others cannot hear? (G19) | 9.1% (3) | 15.2% (5) |
| Do you sometimes have unusual feelings on your skin or inside your body – like being touched when nothing is there or feeling something moving inside your body or feeling that a part of your body is missing? (G21) | 9.1% (3) | 39.4% (13) |
| Any | 24.2% (8) | 75.6% (25) |
We report percentages and .