Author:
North Carol S.,Pfefferbaum Betty,Narayanan Pushpa,Thielman Samuel,McCoy Gretchen,Dumont Cedric,Kawasaki Aya,Ryosho Natsuko,Spitznagel Edward L.
Abstract
BackgroundAfrican disaster-affected populations are poorly represented in disaster mental health literature.AimsTo compare systematically assessed mental health in populations directly exposed to terrorist bombing attacks on two continents, North America and Africa.MethodStructured diagnostic interviews compared citizens exposed to bombings of the US Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya (n=227) and the Oklahoma City Federal Building (n=182).ResultsPrevalence rates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depression were similar after the bombings. No incident (new since the bombing) alcohol use disorders were observed in either site. Symptom group C was strongly associated with PTSD in both sites. The Nairobi group relied more on religious support and the Oklahoma City group used more medical treatment, drugs and alcohol.ConclusionsPost-disaster psycho-pathology had many similarities in the two cultures; however, coping responses and treatment were quite different. The findings suggest potential for international generalisability of post-disaster psychopathology, but confirmatory studies are needed.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
66 articles.
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