Title of article
Posttraumatic stress disorder symptom trajectories in Hurricane Katrina affected youth
Author/Authors
Shannon Self-Brown، نويسنده , , Shannon and Lai، نويسنده , , Betty S. and Thompson، نويسنده , , Julia E. and McGill، نويسنده , , Tia and Kelley، نويسنده , , Mary Lou، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
7
From page
198
To page
204
Abstract
Objective: This study examined trajectories of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in Hurricane Katrina affected youth. Method: A total of 426 youth (51% female; 8–16 years old; mean age=11 years; 75% minorities) completed assessments at 4 time points post-disaster. Measures included Hurricane impact variables (initial loss/disruption and perceived life threat); history of family and community violence exposure, parent and peer social support, and post-disaster posttraumatic stress symptoms. Results: Latent class growth analysis demonstrated that there were three distinct trajectories of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms identified for this sample of youth (resilient, recovering, and chronic, respectively). Youth trajectories were associated with Hurricane-related initial loss/disruption, community violence, and peer social support. Conclusions: The results suggest that youth exposed to Hurricane Katrina have variable posttraumatic stress disorder symptom trajectories. Significant risk and protective factors were identified. Specifically, youth Hurricane and community violence exposure increased risk for a more problematic posttraumatic stress disorder symptom trajectory, while peer social support served as a protective factor for these youth. Identification of these factors suggests directions for future research as well as potential target areas for screening and intervention with disaster exposed youth. Limitations: The convenience sample limits the external validity of the findings to other disaster exposed youth, and the self-report data is susceptible to response bias.
Keywords
Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms , growth mixture modeling , Disasters , children
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
Journal of Affective Disorders
Record number
1434972
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