1. A comparison of PTSD and traumatic event rates in a clinical sample of non-refugee immigrants and native-born individuals with a psychotic disorder: a case-control study.
- Author
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Trabsa, Amira, Redolar-Ripoll, Diego, Vargas, Laura, Llimona, Alba, Hogg, Bridget, Valiente-Gómez, Alicia, Pérez, Víctor, Moreno-Alcázar, Ana, and Amann, Benedikt L.
- Subjects
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PSYCHOSES , *POST-traumatic stress disorder , *ADVERSE childhood experiences , *CASE-control method , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
Background: Migration is a multi-stage social process linked to traumatic event exposure and a notably increased risk of psychosis. Although these conditions affect refugee and non-refugee immigrants, prior trauma research has focused mainly on the refugee population. Objective: To compare and describe the rate and the clinical characterization of PTSD and traumatic events between non-refugee immigrants and native-born individuals with psychotic disorder. Methods: 99 immigrants and 99 native-born individuals (n = 198) with at least one psychotic episode according to DSM-5 criteria were compared on the rate of PTSD diagnosis and traumatic events, using standardized and validated trauma scales. Results: In the non-refugee immigrant group, 31% met diagnostic criteria for PTSD compared to only 7.1% in the native-born group. Total scores in childhood trauma and last year stressful events were 1.5 and 2 times higher in non-refugee immigrants, respectively. Likewise, cumulative lifetime trauma was three times higher in non-refugee immigrants. Finally, non-refugee immigrants reported more violent and life-threatening traumatic events than native-born individuals. Conclusions: These results are relevant since they highlight that non-refugee immigrants with psychotic disorders are highly trauma-exposed, meaning a routine trauma assessment and a trauma-focused intervention for this population should be included in individualized treatment plans. Traumatic events and PTSD rates in the non-refugee immigrant population with psychotic disorder have previously received scant attention. This study found that in a psychotic population, 31% of the non-refugee immigrants presented a PTSD diagnosis compared to only 7.1% of the native-born individuals. Compared to native-born individuals with psychosis, non-refugee immigrants with psychosis have 1.5 times more childhood trauma exposure, 2 times more stressful events in the past year and 3 times more cumulative trauma over their lifetime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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