| Literature DB >> 32508968 |
Giacomo Gualtieri1, Fabio Ferretti2, Alessandra Masti2, Andrea Pozza2, Anna Coluccia2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parental incarceration can produce serious effects on the offspring's mental health. The presence of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in prisoners' offspring is understudied and the few literature data showed heterogeneous evidence, with some studies suggesting that about 25% of prisoners' offspring have PTSD and other reporting much lower prevalence rates around 2-3%. There is no systematic review and meta-analysis about PTSD in prisoners' offspring.Entities:
Keywords: Caregivers; Criminal justice system; Offspring; Post-traumatic stress disorder; Prison; Prisoners; Trauma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32508968 PMCID: PMC7254824 DOI: 10.2174/1745017902016010036
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pract Epidemiol Ment Health ISSN: 1745-0179
Descriptive characteristics of the included studies (n= 6).
| Halligan 2002 [ | United States | Cross-sectional | Lists obtained from the Jewish commun-ity or responded to community group ann-ouncements and news-paper advertisement. Participants of short-term group psycho-therapy at the Mount Sinai Specialized Tre-atment Program for Holocaust Survivors and their families | Holocaust survivor offspring | Not reported in the paper | 14/87 (16%) | 42.30; adults; 62% | Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS; Blake |
| Kazlauskas 2017 [ | Lithuania | Cross-sectional | data for this study from a database built up during the research project “Long-term Effects of Political Oppression in Lithuania” which aimed at exploring long-term effects of political violence (1940–1991) in Lithuania, and was conducted by the Vilnius University Trauma Research Group in collaboration with the Lithuanian Genocide and Resistance Research Center (Gailiene & Kazlauskas, 2005 | Not reported in the paper | Not reported in the paper | 32/110 (29.10%) | 44.65; adults; 61.80% | Impact of Event-Scale Revised (IES-R; Weiss & Marmar, 1997) |
| Phillips 2002 [ | United States | Cross-sectional | Six agencies in Arkansas and Texas recruited subjects from sequential intakes. These agencies included two not-for-profit child and adolescent mental health provider organizations, mental health clinics operated by two teaching hospitals, a psychiatric hospital, and an adolescent medicine clinic with mental health specialists on staff. | Not reported in the paper | Mental retardation (IQ < 70), psychosis. Adolescents | 467/1869 (25%) | 13.7, Range = 11-18; adolescents; 42% | Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children, Present State version (DISC-PS; Shaffer |
| Shehadeh 2015 [ | Palestinian State | Cross-sectional | Israeli prisons | Families with children between 3 and 10 years old and when there was more than 1 child in this age range. | Not reported in the paper | 20/79 (25%) | 7.7; children; 44.2% | UCLA-PTSD-Reaction Index (UCLA-PTSD-RI; Rodriguez |
| Turanovic 2017 [ | United States | Cross-sectional | Arizona Department of Corrections | Incarcerated mothers | Not reported in the paper | 22/700 (3.2%) | Range: 1-17; children; not females’ percentage reported in the paper | Semi-structured interview |
| Zerach 2016 [ | Israel | Longitudinal | Adult offspring of veterans of the 1973 Yom Kippur War: adult children of former prisoners of war | Offspring of captured veterans | Not reported in the paper | 2/98 (2.7%) | 35.19, range = 22-53; adults; 53% | PTSD Inventory (Solomon |