Author:
Rosellini A. J.,Liu H.,Petukhova M. V.,Sampson N. A.,Aguilar-Gaxiola S.,Alonso J.,Borges G.,Bruffaerts R.,Bromet E. J.,de Girolamo G.,de Jonge P.,Fayyad J.,Florescu S.,Gureje O.,Haro J. M.,Hinkov H.,Karam E. G.,Kawakami N.,Koenen K. C.,Lee S.,Lépine J. P.,Levinson D.,Navarro-Mateu F.,Oladeji B. D.,O'Neill S.,Pennell B.-E.,Piazza M.,Posada-Villa J.,Scott K. M.,Stein D. J.,Torres Y.,Viana M. C.,Zaslavsky A. M.,Kessler R. C.
Abstract
BackgroundResearch on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) course finds a substantial proportion of cases remit within 6 months, a majority within 2 years, and a substantial minority persists for many years. Results are inconsistent about pre-trauma predictors.MethodsThe WHO World Mental Health surveys assessed lifetime DSM-IV PTSD presence-course after one randomly-selected trauma, allowing retrospective estimates of PTSD duration. Prior traumas, childhood adversities (CAs), and other lifetime DSM-IV mental disorders were examined as predictors using discrete-time person-month survival analysis among the 1575 respondents with lifetime PTSD.Results20%, 27%, and 50% of cases recovered within 3, 6, and 24 months and 77% within 10 years (the longest duration allowing stable estimates). Time-related recall bias was found largely for recoveries after 24 months. Recovery was weakly related to most trauma types other than very low [odds-ratio (OR) 0.2–0.3] early-recovery (within 24 months) associated with purposefully injuring/torturing/killing and witnessing atrocities and very low later-recovery (25+ months) associated with being kidnapped. The significant ORs for prior traumas, CAs, and mental disorders were generally inconsistent between early- and later-recovery models. Cross-validated versions of final models nonetheless discriminated significantly between the 50% of respondents with highest and lowest predicted probabilities of both early-recovery (66–55% v. 43%) and later-recovery (75–68% v. 39%).ConclusionsWe found PTSD recovery trajectories similar to those in previous studies. The weak associations of pre-trauma factors with recovery, also consistent with previous studies, presumably are due to stronger influences of post-trauma factors.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology