| Literature DB >> 34045442 |
Marielle Wathelet1,2,3,4, Thomas Fovet2,3,4, Améliane Jousset5, Stéphane Duhem1,2,3,6, Enguerrand Habran7, Mathilde Horn3,4, Christophe Debien2,3, Charles-Edouard Notredame3,4, Thierry Baubet2,8, Guillaume Vaiva2,3,4, Fabien D'Hondt9,10,11.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic and quarantine measures have sparked debate regarding their traumatic nature. This cross-sectional study reports the prevalence rate of probable post-traumatic stress syndrome (PTSD) and associated factors among French university students. A total of 22,883 students completed the online questionnaire. The prevalence rate of probable PTSD, assessed using the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5, was 19.5% [19.0-20.0]. Female (1.32 [1.21-1.45]) or non-binary gender (1.76 [1.35-2.31]), exposure to a non-COVID-19-related traumatic event (3.37 [3.08-3.67]), having lived through quarantine alone (1.22 [1.09-1.37]), poor quality of social ties (2.38 [2.15-2.62]), loss of income (1.20 [1.09-1.31]), poor quality housing (1.90 [1.59-2.26]), low-quality of the information received (1.50 [1.35-1.66]) and a high level of exposure to COVID-19 (from 1.38 [1.24-1.54] to 10.82 [2.33-76.57] depending on the score) were associated with PTSD. Quarantine was considered potentially traumatic by 78.8% of the students with probable PTSD. These findings suggest the pandemic context and lockdown measures could have post-traumatic consequences, stimulating debate on the nosography of PTSD.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34045442 PMCID: PMC8157529 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01438-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Characteristics of the sample and factors associated with probable PTSD in the global sample according to multivariate logistic regression analysis.
| Global sample | No probable PTSD | Probable PTSD | Adjusted OR [CI 95%] | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age, | 20.9 | (4.1) | 20.8 | (4.1) | 21.2 | (4.0) | 0.98 | [0.98–0.99] | 0.003 |
| Gender, | |||||||||
| Male | 5906 | (25.8) | 4981 | (27.0) | 925 | (20.8) | 1 | [ref] | |
| Female | 16,640 | (72.7) | 13,232 | (71.8) | 3408 | (76.5) | 1.32 | [1.21–1.45] | <0.001 |
| Others | 337 | (1.5) | 214 | (1.2) | 123 | (2.8) | 1.76 | [1.35–2.31] | <0.001 |
| Psychiatric history, | 2417 | (10.6) | 1467 | (8.0) | 950 | (21.3) | 2.26 | [2.05–2.51] | <0.001 |
| Exposure to another traumatic event, | 3221 | (14.1) | 1745 | (9.5) | 1476 | (33.1) | 3.37 | [3.08–3.67] | <0.001 |
| Living alone, | 2646 | (11.6) | 1908 | (10.4) | 738 | (16.6) | 1.22 | [1.09–1.37] | <0.001 |
| Foreign student, | 1365 | (6.0) | 898 | (4.9) | 467 | (10.5) | 1.70 | [1.48–1.95] | <0.001 |
| Quality of social ties, | |||||||||
| High (7–10) | 9706 | (42.4) | 8474 | (46.0) | 1232 | (27.6) | 1 | [ref] | |
| Medium (4–6) | 8894 | (38.9) | 7126 | (38.7) | 1768 | (39.7) | 1.42 | [1.30–1.55] | <0.001 |
| Low (0–3) | 4283 | (18.7) | 2827 | (15.3) | 1456 | (32.7) | 2.38 | [2.15–2.62] | <0.001 |
| Feeling integrated, | |||||||||
| High (7–10) | 14,310 | (62.5) | 12,232 | (66.4) | 2078 | (46.6) | 1 | [ref] | |
| Medium (4–6) | 6872 | (30.0) | 5136 | (27.9) | 1736 | (39.0) | 1.56 | [1.44–1.69] | <0.001 |
| Low (0–3) | 1701 | (7.4) | 1059 | (5.7) | 642 | (14.4) | 2.21 | [1.95–2.51] | <0.001 |
| Loss of income, | 4184 | (18.3) | 3090 | (16.8) | 1094 | (24.6) | 1.20 | [1.09–1.31] | <0.001 |
| Housing quality, | |||||||||
| High (7–10) | 19,229 | (84.0) | 16,052 | (87.1) | 3177 | (71.3) | 1 | [ref] | |
| Medium (4–6) | 2921 | (12.8) | 1961 | (10.6) | 960 | (21.5) | 1.60 | [1.45–1.76] | <0.001 |
| Low (0–3) | 733 | (3.2) | 414 | (2.2) | 319 | (7.2) | 1.90 | [1.59–2.26] | <0.001 |
| Quality of information received, | |||||||||
| High (7–10) | 8375 | (36.6) | 7082 | (38.4) | 1293 | (29.0) | 1 | [ref] | |
| Medium (4–6) | 10,586 | (46.3) | 8444 | (45.8) | 2142 | (48.1) | 1.26 | [1.15–1.37] | <0.001 |
| Low (0–3) | 3922 | (17.1) | 2901 | (15.7) | 1021 | (22.9) | 1.50 | [1.35–1.66] | <0.001 |
| 0 | 6386 | (27.9) | 5698 | (30.9) | 688 | (15.4) | 1 | [ref] | |
| 1 | 7159 | (31.3) | 6053 | (32.8) | 1106 | (24.8) | 1.38 | [1.24–1.54] | <0.001 |
| 2 | 5057 | (22.1) | 3951 | (21.4) | 1106 | (24.8) | 2.02 | [1.81–2.26] | <0.001 |
| 3 | 2757 | (12.0) | 1911 | (10.4) | 846 | (19.0) | 3.07 | [2.71–3.47] | <0.001 |
| 4 | 1117 | (4.9) | 626 | (3.4) | 491 | (11.0) | 4.62 | [3.95–5.41] | <0.001 |
| 5 | 330 | (1.4) | 158 | (0.8) | 172 | (3.8) | 6.87 | [5.32–8.87] | <0.001 |
| 6 | 69 | (0.3) | 28 | (0.1) | 41 | (0.9) | 8.17 | [4.79–14.06] | <0.001 |
| 7 | 8 | (0.0) | 2 | (0.0) | 6 | (0.1) | 10.82 | [2.33–76.57] | 0.005 |
a m (sd) mean (standard deviation).
Fig. 1Proportions of students considering COVID-19-related events as potentially traumatic.
A list of pandemic-related events was presented to the students. They were asked, for each event, to indicate if they considered it as traumatic (i.e., likely to endanger the life or the physical or psychological integrity of a person who is exposed to it). In yellow, the proportions of students answering “yes” among the whole sample. In blue, the proportions of students answering “yes” among those with a probable PTSD (as assessed by a PCL-5 score above 32). Quarantine, event of interest in our study, is highlighted.