Author:
Kohrt Brandon A.,Hruschka Daniel J.,Worthman Carol M.,Kunz Richard D.,Baldwin Jennifer L.,Upadhaya Nawaraj,Acharya Nanda Raj,Koirala Suraj,Thapa Suraj B.,Tol Wietse A.,Jordans Mark J. D.,Robkin Navit,Dev Sharma Vidya,Nepal Mahendra K.
Abstract
BackgroundPost-conflict mental health studies in low-income countries have lacked
pre-conflict data to evaluate changes in psychiatric morbidity resulting
from political violence.AimsThis prospective study compares mental health before and after exposure
to direct political violence during the People's War in Nepal.MethodAn adult cohort completed the Beck Depression Inventory and Beck Anxiety
Inventory in 2000 prior to conflict violence in their community and in
2007 after the war.ResultsOf the original 316 participants, 298 (94%) participated in the
post-conflict assessment. Depression increased from 30.9 to 40.6%.
Anxiety increased from 26.2 to 47.7%. Post-conflict post-traumatic stress
disorder (PTSD) was 14.1%. Controlling for ageing, the depression
increase was not significant. The anxiety increase showed a dose–response
association with conflict exposure when controlling for ageing and daily
stressors. No demographic group displayed unique vulnerability or
resilience to the effects of conflict exposure.ConclusionsConflict exposure should be considered in the context of other types of
psychiatric risk factors. Conflict exposure predicted increases in
anxiety whereas socioeconomic factors and non-conflict stressful life
events were the major predictors of depression. Research and
interventions in postconflict settings therefore should consider
differential trajectories for depression v. anxiety and
the importance of addressing chronic social problems ranging from poverty
to gender and ethnic/caste discrimination.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
83 articles.
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