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Risk and resilience in trajectories of post-traumatic stress symptoms among first responders after the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake: 7-year prospective cohort study

Authors :
Taku Saito
Florentine H. S. van der Does
Masanori Nagamine
Nic J. van der Wee
Jun Shigemura
Taisuke Yamamoto
Yoshitomo Takahashi
Minori Koga
Hiroyuki Toda
Aihide Yoshino
Eric Vermetten
Erik J. Giltay
Source :
The British Journal of Psychiatry, 221(5), 668-675. CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundFirst responders to disasters are at risk of developing post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The trajectories of post-traumatic stress symptom severity differ among individuals, even if they are exposed to similar events. These trajectories have not yet been reported in non-Western first responders.AimsWe aimed to explore post-traumatic stress symptom severity trajectories and their risk factors in first responders to the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake (GEJE) – a historically large earthquake that resulted in a tsunami and a nuclear disaster.MethodA total of 55 632 Japan Ground Self-Defense Force (JGSDF) personnel dispatched to the GEJE were enrolled in this 7-year longitudinal cohort study. PTSD symptom severity was measured using the Impact of Event Scale-Revised. Trajectories were identified using latent growth mixture models (LGMM). Nine potential risk factors for the symptom severity trajectories were analysed using multinomial logistic regression.ResultsFive symptom severity trajectories were identified: ‘resilient’ (54.8%), ‘recovery’ (24.6%), ‘incomplete recovery’ (10.7%), ‘late-onset’ (5.7%), and ‘chronic’ (4.3%). The main risk factors for the four non-resilient trajectories were older age, personal disaster experiences and working conditions. These working conditions included duties involving body recovery or radiation exposure risk, longer deployment length, later or no post-deployment leave and longer post-deployment overtime.ConclusionsThe majority of first responders to GEJE were resilient and developed few or no PTSD symptoms. A substantial minority experienced late-onset and chronic symptom severity trajectories. The identified risk factors can inform policies for prevention, early detection and intervention in individuals at risk of developing symptomatic trajectories.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00071250
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The British Journal of Psychiatry, 221(5), 668-675. CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c891f4c7550a2042a4549b168a63bf1