初级保健病人的创伤性生活事件:一项不同种族样本的研究。

E A Holman, R C Silver, H Waitzkin
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引用次数: 149

摘要

目的:调查移民和其他寻求初级保健的人群:(1)创伤性生活事件的患病率、类型和预测因素;(2)创伤性生活事件、精神障碍与初级保健服务利用的关系。设计:采用结构化诊断访谈进行调查。环境:南加州以社区为基础的大学附属初级保健诊所。参与者:1456名成年患者,代表4个种族群体(墨西哥移民、中美洲移民、美国出生的墨西哥裔拉丁裔和美国出生的非拉丁裔白人)。依赖测量:创伤性事件发生率用诊断访谈表的创伤后应激障碍部分测量;使用《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第三版修订版标准进行的综合国际诊断访谈确定的精神疾病;身体机能(简短健康调查);以及6个月内就诊的次数。结果:近10%的患者在前一年经历过创伤性事件,57%的患者在其一生中至少经历过一次。最常见的创伤形式是发生在家庭以外的人际暴力(21%)、严重损失或事故(17%)、目睹死亡或暴力(13%)和家庭暴力(12%)。与美国出生的非拉丁裔白人相比,墨西哥移民报告经历创伤性事件的可能性是墨西哥移民的一半,中美洲移民的可能性是76%。已婚人士报告创伤的可能性明显较低。创伤经历、女性性别和非拉丁裔与精神障碍的存在有关。一年和终身精神疾病与身体功能较差和6个月期间诊所就诊次数增加有关。结论:在不同种族的初级保健患者样本中,创伤性生活事件是常见的,并且与创伤后应激障碍以外的精神障碍有关。精神疾病反过来又与身体功能不良和初级保健使用率较高密切相关。对创伤经历的筛查应伴随对精神障碍的评估,以确保对寻求初级保健服务的患者进行适当治疗。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Traumatic life events in primary care patients: a study in an ethnically diverse sample.

Objective: To examine among immigrants and others seeking primary care: (1) the prevalence, types, and predictors of traumatic life events; and (2) the relations among traumatic life events, psychiatric disorders, and utilization of primary care services.

Design: Survey with structured diagnostic interview.

Setting: Community-based, university-affiliated primary care clinic in southern California.

Participants: Fourteen hundred fifty-six adult patients representing 4 ethnic groups (Mexican immigrants, Central American immigrants, US-born Latinos of Mexican descent, and US-born non-Latino whites).

Dependent measures: Rates of traumatic events measured with the Posttraumatic Stress Disorder section of the Diagnostic Interview Schedule; psychiatric disorders identified by the Composite International Diagnostic Interview using Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Revised Third Edition criteria; physical functioning (Short Form Health Survey); and the number of medical clinic visits during a 6-month period.

Results: Nearly 10% of patients had experienced a traumatic event in the previous year, and 57% had experienced at least 1 during their lifetimes. The most common forms of trauma were interpersonal violence occurring outside the family (21%), acute losses or accidents (17%), witnessing death or violence (13%), and domestic violence (12%). When compared with the US-born non-Latino whites, Mexican immigrants were half as likely, and Central American immigrants were 76% more likely, to report having experienced a traumatic event. Married individuals were significantly less likely to report traumas. Traumatic experiences, female gender, and non-Latino ethnicity were associated with the presence of a psychiatric disorder. One-year and lifetime psychiatric disorders were associated with poorer physical functioning and an increased number of clinic visits during a 6-month period.

Conclusions: Traumatic life events are common and associated with psychiatric disorders other than posttraumatic stress disorder in an ethnically diverse sample of primary care patients. Psychiatric disorders, in turn, are strongly associated with poor physical functioning and higher rates of primary care utilization. Screening for traumatic experiences should accompany assessments of psychiatric disorders to ensure adequate treatment of patients seeking primary care services.

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