南非流离失所的津巴布韦人创伤和创伤后应激症状的性别差异。

Erhabor S Idemudia, John K William, Klaus Boehnke, Gail Wyatt
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引用次数: 66

摘要

背景:多年来,超过340万津巴布韦人(占该国人口的四分之一)逃离该国到其他国家,南非是主要的热门目的地。在南非,由于仇外攻击和怨恨,他们成为一个易受伤害的群体,可能遭受创伤和创伤后应激障碍或创伤后应激障碍。男性和女性如何受到影响,在心理学文献中没有记载,特别是关于非洲的文献。此外,全球关于性别差异、创伤和创伤后应激障碍/创伤后应激障碍的研究尚无定论。本文探讨了南非流离失所的津巴布韦人ptsd的性别差异。据推测,男性和女性的心理健康状况不佳、移民前后的创伤与女性的创伤后应激障碍有关系,但对男性的影响程度不同。方法:采用引导有目的方便抽样、问卷深度访谈的方法,对南非林波波省Polokwane的125名流离失所和无家可归的津巴布韦难民进行数据采集。使用一般健康问卷(GHQ-28)和创伤后应激障碍检查表(平民版PCL)对参与者进行人口统计变量、迁移前和迁移后困难检查表、心理健康评估。结果:在结构方程模型中验证了PTSD可预测性存在性别差异的假设。对于男性来说,三种途径(移民前压力、移民后压力和心理健康状况不佳)对PTSD的影响都不显著,而对于女性来说,从心理健康状况不佳到PTSD的影响都很显著。36, p= 0.013)显著,但性别差异的大小是适度的。然而,女性的效应量总是大于男性。结论:这些发现有助于缩小非洲人创伤后应激障碍/创伤后应激障碍研究的差距,并表明文献中提出的PTSD预测中可能存在的性别差异需要进一步关注。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Gender Differences in Trauma and Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms among Displaced Zimbabweans in South Africa.

Background: Over the years, more than 3.4 million Zimbabweans (a quarter of the country's population) have fled the country to other countries with South Africa as the main popular destination. In South Africa, they become a vulnerable group with the plausibility of suffering trauma and PTSS or PTSD due to xenophobic attacks and resentment. How males and females are impacted is undocumented in psychological literature, particularly with regards to Africa. In addition, global research on gender differences, trauma and PTSS/PTSD are inconclusive. This paper explores gender differences in PTSS among displaced Zimbabweans in South Africa. A poor mental health status, pre and post-migration traumas of men and women were hypothesized to have a relationship with PTSS for women, but not to the same extent for men.

Method: Through a guided purposive convenient sampling, in-depth interviews using questionnaires, data were obtained from a sample of 125 displaced and homeless Zimbabwean refugees in Polokwane, Limpopo Province, South Africa. Participants were assessed on demographic variables, pre- and post-migration difficulties checklists, mental health using the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-28) and the PTSD Checklist (Civilian Version (PCL).

Result: The hypothesis of a gender difference in the predictability of PTSD was tested in structural equation models. For men none of the three paths (pre-migration stress, post-migration stress, and poor mental health) on PTSD is significant, whereas for women both the path from poor mental health onto PTSD (ß=.36, p=.013) are significant, but the size of the gender differences was modest. However, effect sizes are always larger for women than they are for men.

Conclusion: The findings help closing the gap in PTSS/PTSD research for Africans and suggest that indeed likely gender differences in the prediction of PTSS, suggested in the literature, needs further attention.

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