[Screening for posttraumatic stress disorder in people affected by the 2010 earthquake in Chile]

Alicia Ruth Fernández, Juan Carlos Estario, Julio Enrique Enders, María Josefina López de Neira, Roberto Ariel Abeldaño, Alicia Ruth Fernández, Juan Carlos Estario, Julio Enrique Enders, María Josefina López de Neira, Roberto Ariel Abeldaño

Abstract

The authors conducted an assessment of post-traumatic stress disorder screening in the Chilean population following the February 2010 earthquake, based on the Post Earthquake Survey with a multistage sample of 24,982 individuals over 18 years of age, applying the Davidson Trauma Scale. Multivariate analysis was performed with significance set at p<0.05. Prevalence of positive screening for post-traumatic stress disorder was 11% for the country as a whole, but reached 30% at lower-level disaggregation. The logistic regression model for post-traumatic stress disorder identified the following risk factors: belonging to a low-income family, having suffered damage to the household, a history of health problems in the previous month, and female gender (p<0.05). Family coping with the earthquake proved to be a protective factor as compared to other social or neighborhood groups, and more years of schooling were also protective (p<0.05). Positive screening for posttraumatic stress disorders revealed clear social inequalities.

Source: PubMed

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