Download Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Among Ethnoracial Minorities in the

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Psychological injury wikipedia , lookup

Posttraumatic stress disorder wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Among Ethnoracial Minorities in
the United States
NNAMDI POLE, JOSEPH P. GONE, AND
MADHUR KULKARNI
PRESENTED BY: TIFFANY N. PELLETIER
Quick Overview of PTSD
 http://www.mhhe.com/socscience/psychology/faces
/
PTSD Prevalence in Ethnoracial Minority Groups
 African Americans
 Latino Americans
 Asian and Pacific Islander Americans (APIA)
 American Indians
African Americans and PTSD
 Constitute 12.3% of the US population
 Similarities:
 Religious Orientation, strong work ethic, reliance on extended
family networks, maintenance of tight kinship bonds.
 Lower rates of Mood Disorders and SUDs than
European Americans
 Higher rates of Anxiety disorders (simple phobia and
agoraphobia)
 Mixed Rates of PTSD when compared to European
Americans
African Americans and PTSD
 Trauma Exposure
 Studies that have found more PTSD among African Americans
have also found more trauma exposure within this group.
 Studies that have controlled for trauma exposure
have almost eliminated difference in the prevalence
of PTSD compared to European Americans
 Reasons for more trauma exposure?
 Coping Mechanisms for dealing with trauma
 Trait and Peritraumatic Dissociation
Assessment & Treatment within African
Americans
 African Americans have been found to be:
 Less likely to utilize mental health services than European
Americans
 More likely to drop out of treatment than European Americans
 African American have been shown to be over-
diagnosed with Schizophrenia but under-diagnosed
with affective disorders.

How might this effect PTSD diagnosis in African Americans?
 Recommendations within Psychotherapy
 Ethnic matching?
Latino Americans and PTSD
 Largest minority group in the U.S.: 12.5%
 Similarities among Latino Americans


Catholicism & Spanish Language
Core values attributed to Latino Americans

familismo, simpatia, respeto, personalismo, fatalismo
 Lower rates of mood, anxiety, and other mental disorders
when compared to non-Latino Caucasians
 Higher rates of PTSD especially within Latino American
combat veterans.
 Moderators of PTSD within Latino Americans


Geographic Location
Acculturation
Latino Americans and PTSD
 Trauma Exposure
 Unlike African Americans, elevated rates of PTSD in Latino
Americans cannot be explained by higher amounts of trauma
exposure.
 Discrimination: Latino Americans who reported
ethnic discrimination also reported more severe
PTSD symptomology
 Coping
 Greater Peritraumatic Dissociation
Assessment & Treatment within Latino
Americans
 Latinos have been found to utilize mental health services
less than their European American counterparts.

Trauma exposed Latinos however, appear to utilize mental health
services at a similar rate when compared to non-Latino trauma
exposed individuals.
 Assessment & Therapy can be difficult with Latino
Americans because of the language barriers, somatic
complaints as “idioms of distress,” and also symptoms
that are uncommon to PTSD (i.e. auditory hallucinations
 Recommendations within Psychotherapy:



Spanish Speaking therapist?
Family therapy?
Boundaries of traditional therapy too rigid?
Asian and Pacific Island Americans (APIA) and
PTSD
 Although APIAs only constitute 4.4% of the total U.S.
population, it is the fastest growing minority group.
 Very diverse ethnic group but similarities do exist:

Identity in terms of a larger social unit, value of maintaining
harmony with others, greater adherence to social norms,
subordinate individual desires to the will of the group.
 APIAs show lower rates of psychopathology,
including PTSD, than their European American
counterparts.

Japanese Americans had significantly lower rates of PTSD
Asian and Pacific Island Americans (APIA) and
PTSD
 Trauma Exposure
 There hasn’t been much research done on the APIA group. Not
surprising, the research shows that the subgroup of APIA that
has experienced the most trauma (Cambodian Refugees) also
had more severe PTSD. Japanese Americans showed the least
amount of PTSD symptomology even when controlling for
trauma exposure.
 Acculturative Stress
 Ethnic Discrimination
 Reporting Style
Assessment & Treatment within Asian and
Pacific Island Americans (APIA)
 Utilization of mental health services among APIAs
 Research on general mental health service utilization among
APIAs show that this ethnic group is less likely to use these
services as well as prematurely terminate psychotherapy.
 Post-9/11 APIAs were as likely as their European American
counterparts to seek mental health services.
 APIAs appear to get as much benefit from PTSD therapy as do
European Americans.
 Recommendations for Psychotherapy
 Interventions at group level?
American Indians and PTSD
 American Indians constitute 1.5% of the U.S.
population.
 American Indians appear to have greater levels of
alcohol abuse and dependence and suicide rates than
European Americans
 Very few studies of PTSD within American Indians,
but one study found that the prevalence of PTSD
within Native Americans was almost double that
when compared to European Americans.
American Indians and PTSD
 Trauma Exposure
 American Indian veterans (like African American, Latino
American, and APIA veterans) reported more exposure to
combat than European Americans.
 Controlling for exposure to trauma significantly reduced PTSD
rates among American Indians.
 Intergenerational Trauma
 Multigenerational Trauma History
Relationship of Parental Trauma
Exposure and PTSD to PTSD, Depressive
and Anxiety Disorders in Offspring
Rachel Yehuda, Sarah Halligan, Linda Bierer
A specific association was found between parental
PTSD and the occurrence of PTSD in offspring.
Additionally, parental trauma exposure, more than
parental PTSD, was found to be significantly
associated with lifetime depressive disorder. The
identification of parental PTSD as a risk factor for
PTSD in offspring of Holocaust survivors defines a
sample in which the biological and psychological
correlates of risk for PTSD can be further examined.
Assessment & Treatment within American
Indians
 Utilization of mental health services among American
Indians:

American Indians may be more likely to seek help from traditional
healers within their tribe
 Assessment may be difficult within the American Indian
group.


Less distinction between emotional and somatic symptoms
May be confusing due to the generations of discrimination
 Recommendations for Psychotherapy



Incorporate American Indian tradition into therapy?
Meet with spiritual leaders?
Participate in traditional ceremonies?
PTSD in Ethnoracial Minorities
 Review revealed mixed data pertaining to prevalence
of PTSD among minority groups

Overall there is evidence to support the theory that ethnoracial
minority groups may have higher prevalence rates of PTSD
(with the exception of Japanese Americans)
 Small effect size associated with minority and PTSD
Recommendations for Future Research
 Future research with ethnoracial minority groups
should be focused within the framework of
pretrauma, index trauma, and posttrauma variables
Pretrauma Variables
 Variables that occur prior to the trauma exposure:
 Ethnic or Racial group Membership
 Level of acculteration
 Prior exposure to traumatic and non-traumatic stressors
 Multigenerational trauma Exposure
 Age
 Gender
 Family history of pscyopathology
 Etc.
Index Trauma
 Variables that influence the likelihood of magnitude
of exposure to the trauma:





Peritraumatic dissociation
Exposure
Cultural meaning of trauma
Trauma Severity
Perceived life threat
Postrauma Variables
 All variables that occur after the trauma and
influence the trajectory of trauma recovery:







Coping style
Postrauma life stress
Disclosure of trauma
Expressions of emotions
Social support
Co-morbid psychopathology
Service utilization
Conclusion
 Ethnoracial variables may be important to consider
in the assessment and treatment of PTSD (although
you should not use minority status alone to make
clinical decisions regarding PTSD).