22 research outputs found
The Impact of Traumatic Experience on Attitude Towards Future in Refugee Adolescents
Traumatic experience has overall far reaching consequences on personality. In particular,
it has significant impact on teenagers that are just approaching the phase of
solving their identity problems. This research examines the relation of traumatic experience
and attitude towards the future in two groups of adolescents. The first group consists
of 20 adolescents-refugees from the East Slavonia that were settled in Rijeka area
with their parents during the last six years. The second group consists of 20 adolescentās
local inhabitants that were influenced by the war only indirectly. Results show significant
difference between refugees and non-refugees in expressed interpersonal trust, frustration
tolerance, and formation of close contacts, adaptability, precaution, bitterness,
and social desirability. Both groups show increased depression, pessimism and poor
self-control. This might be considered as general characteristic of society in war
āI'm Still Fighting for the Two of Usā: How Partners of UK Veterans Construct Their Experience of Living with CombatāRelated Trauma
There has been little qualitative research into the experiences of UK partners of veterans with PTSD. This study therefore aimed to explore how partners constructed their experiences of living with the condition. Fifteen female partners of male UK veterans were recruited and interviewed. Using a social constructionist thematic analysis, five themes were constructed: the women's need to subdue own emotional and behavioral responses; dilemmas about whether the veteran was unwell or ābadā; attempts at negotiating multiple roles; challenging the narrative of veterans as heroes; and the relational struggle with the transition to nonmilitary life. This study highlighted the importance of considering the veteran as existing within a relational and cultural context, and the need to include partners in therapeutic interventions
Recovery from Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms: A Qualitative Study of Attributions in Survivors of War
This study was funded by a grant from the European Commission, contract number INCO-CT-2004-50917
Changes in the Provision of Institutionalized Mental Health Care in Post-Communist Countries
PMCID: PMC3371010This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
Trace metal distribution in the bed, bank and suspended sediment of the Ravensbourne River and its implication for sediment monitoring in an urban river
Purpose This study aims to identify a suitable sediment compartment for sediment quality monitoring by: (a) studying the concentration of trace metals (Cd, Cu, Ni, Pb and Zn) in the bed, bank and suspended sediment compartments of the Ravensbourne River to establish any differences in trace metal concentrations with compartment; (b) determining the influence of sediment particle size fractions (ā0.05) in the concentrations of metals between the suspended sediment and the <ā63 Ī¼m bed sediment fraction, but there was a significant difference (pā<ā0.05) between the suspended sediment and the <ā63 Ī¼m bank sediment fraction. There were also significant differences between the concentrations of metals in the <ā63 Ī¼m and the 63 Ī¼mā2 mm fractions. Generally, the Ravensbourne River did not comply with the draft UK sediment quality guidelines for the metals analysed. Conclusions This study shows the importance of identifying a suitable sediment compartment to sample for compliance with sediment quality standards. The bed and suspended sediments are the most widely used sediment compartments for sediment monitoring, but collecting sufficient mass of the <ā63 Ī¼m sediment fraction for monitoring presents a challenge for urban gravel bed rivers like the Ravensbourne River. It seems appropriate to establish individual monitoring regimes for different rivers
Psychiatric comorbidity and PTSD-related health problems in war veterans: Cross sectional study
Background and objectives
PTSD rarely occurs on its own and opinions on the correlation between PTSD and its comorbidities are still divided.
Methods
To identify the comorbidity profile of psychiatric diagnoses in PTSD ā affected war veterans and to determine the correlation with mental and health problems.
Participants and methods
The experimental group consisted of 154 war veterans with combat-related PTSD. The control group was made of 77 veterans without PTSD. The study applied a general demographic questionnaire, the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire ā Bosnia and Herzegovina version and the MINI.
Results
A 97.4% of PTSD-diagnosed veterans satisfied criteria for other mental disorders and that 44.8% suffered chronic somatic problems. More frequently they suffered from current depressive episode (41.6%), past depressive episode (36.4%), depressive episode with melancholic features (36.4%), dysthymia (13.6%), panic disorder with agoraphobia (11.0%), generalized anxiety disorder (82.5%) alcohol abuse (34.4%) and suicidal ideation (26.0%).
Conclusion
The study showed that chronic PTSD in war veterans was almost always accompanied by multiple psychiatric and often somatic comorbidities
Psychiatric comorbidity and PTSD-related health problems in war veterans: Cross sectional study
Background and objectives
PTSD rarely occurs on its own and opinions on the correlation between PTSD and its comorbidities are still divided.
Methods
To identify the comorbidity profile of psychiatric diagnoses in PTSD ā affected war veterans and to determine the correlation with mental and health problems.
Participants and methods
The experimental group consisted of 154 war veterans with combat-related PTSD. The control group was made of 77 veterans without PTSD. The study applied a general demographic questionnaire, the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire ā Bosnia and Herzegovina version and the MINI.
Results
A 97.4% of PTSD-diagnosed veterans satisfied criteria for other mental disorders and that 44.8% suffered chronic somatic problems. More frequently they suffered from current depressive episode (41.6%), past depressive episode (36.4%), depressive episode with melancholic features (36.4%), dysthymia (13.6%), panic disorder with agoraphobia (11.0%), generalized anxiety disorder (82.5%) alcohol abuse (34.4%) and suicidal ideation (26.0%).
Conclusion
The study showed that chronic PTSD in war veterans was almost always accompanied by multiple psychiatric and often somatic comorbidities