| Literature DB >> 32552778 |
Elisa Kaltenbach1,2,3, Katharin Hermenau4,5, Maggie Schauer4,5, Katalin Dohrmann4,5, Thomas Elbert4,5, Inga Schalinski4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Trauma-focused therapy approaches are recommended as treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). This includes the treatment of trauma-related suffering in refugee populations. However, there is a lack of knowledge about symptom trajectories in refugees living in volatile conditions. This has led to fear of "retraumatisation" and general skepticism in clinicians concerning the use of exposure therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Imaginal exposure; PTSD; Refugee; Symptom trajectories; Trauma therapy
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32552778 PMCID: PMC7298826 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02720-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Flow of clients through the study. C = structured clinical interview, S = self-rating
Sociodemography
| Characteristics | Sample ( |
|---|---|
| Female sex, No. (%) | 10 (39) |
| Age, | 28.8 (12.2, 14–61) |
| Education, | 8.1 (5.0, 0–18) |
| Region/Country of origin, No. | |
| Afghanistan | 11 (42) |
| Western Asia | 7 (27) |
| West Africa | 4 (15) |
| Balkan states | 2 (8) |
| Ethiopia | 1 (4) |
| Sri Lanka | 1 (4) |
| Duration of stay in Germany, | 19.0 (13.4, 2–57) |
| Core family members in Germany, No. (%) | 12 (50) a |
| Accommodation, No. (%) | |
| Refugee accommodation | 19 (73) |
| Private accommodation | 7 (27) |
| Asylum status, No. (%) | |
| First instance application | 14 (54) |
| Rejection | 7 (27) |
| Recognition | 5 (19) |
| Traumatic events, | 7.2 (2.2, 3–11) |
| Natural disaster, No. (%) | 7 (27) |
| Accident, fire, or explosion, No. (%) | 22 (85) |
| Physical assault through a family member or friend | 16 (62) |
| Physical assault through an unknown person | 22 (85) |
| Sexual assault through a family member or friend | 5 (19) |
| Sexual assault through an unknown person | 10 (39) |
| Combat or exposure to war-zone | 24 (92) |
| Captivity | 17 (65) |
| Torture | 16 (62) |
| Life-threatening illness or injury | 18 (69) |
| Other unwanted or uncomfortable sexual experience | 8 (31) |
| Other traumatic event | 21 (81) |
an = 24
Mental health scores at baseline, as well as at and 3 months and 6 months follow-up
| T0/ T1 | End of NET | F3 | F6 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical rating | ||||
| PTSD sum, | 43.3 (12.5, 23–66) | 20.6 (9.0, 9–48) b | 24.9 (12.0, 9–46) c | |
| Depression sum, | 16.0 (5.8, 5–26) | 8.2 (4.6, 1–22) a | 10.7 (5.8, 3–23) c | |
| PTSD diagnosis, No. (%) | 26 (100) | 2 (11) b | 7 (39) c | |
| Depression diagnosis, No. (%) | 15 (58) | 3 (15) a | 6 (33) c | |
| Self-rating | ||||
| PTSD sum, | 52.2 (15.5, 22–80) | 34.0 (19.7, 2–74) | 34.2 (15.0, 8–62) a | 38.5 (18.2, 3–62) d |
| Functionality sum, | 2.16 (0.9, 1–3.8) | 1.37 (0.8, 0–3.3) | 1.33 (0.8, .13–3.1) b | 1.47 (1.0, 0–3.4) d |
n = 26, an = 20, bn = 19, cn = 18, dn = 17, PTSD = posttraumatic stress disorder, T0 = clinical baseline assessment, T1 = self-rating in the beginning of the first therapy session, F3 = 3-month follow-up assessment, F6 = 6-month follow-up assessment
Fig. 2Trajectories of self-rated PTSD symptoms during and after NET. The bold line represents the smoothed overall mean and the grey shade marks the 95% confidence interval. The individual courses are depicted by the thin lines. The dotted lines mark the time after NET. T1 is the beginning of NET, Q25, Q50, Q75, Q100 are the summarized quartiles during NET. F3 and F6 are the 3- and 6-month follow-up assessments
Fig. 3Groups of symptom courses during NET. Fast response is classified as those with a decrease of at least 10 points between T1 and Q25. Slow response is classified as those with a decrease of at least 10 points between T1 and Q75. No immediate response is classified as those who showed a change of less than 10 points over the course of NET. Groups are depicted with the lines, the individual persons are depicted with the according signs. T1 is the beginning of NET, Q25, Q50, Q75, Q100 are the summarized quartiles during NET. Negative values represent symptom improvements in respect to baseline, whereas positive values show aggravations