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Ongoing Traumatic Stress (OTS) and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD ): The impact of cartel related violence on the U.S./México border. . Thom Taylor. Agenda. A brief background to traumatic stress Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) Ongoing Traumatic Stress (OTS)
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Ongoing Traumatic Stress (OTS) and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD):The impact of cartel related violence on the U.S./México border. Thom Taylor
Agenda • A brief background to traumatic stress • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) • Ongoing Traumatic Stress (OTS) • Preliminary study of OTS in population exposed to violence and insecurity in Ciudad Juárez • Considerations for U.S./México Border Public Health and Safety communities
“Violence and Insecurity” • Extreme increase in cartel and community related violence in northern México • Cartel related murders (2000+ in past year) • Kidnappings • Car-jackings • Robberies/Extortion (“Cuotas”) • Constant threat • U.S. not immune • Cartel and army related violence (CARV) • Psycho-social costs to a community • Increases stress Caetano, 2009; U.S. Department of State, 2009; Thoumi, 2002; Chan, Air, & McFarlane, 2003
Extreme Stress Reactions • Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (& Probable PTSD) • Exposure to traumatic experience (s) • Feelings of fear, helplessness, and/or horror peri-event • Intrusive thoughts/Re-experiencing (1+ symptoms) • Avoidance/numbing to situations (3+ symptoms) • Hyper-arousal (2+ symptoms) • Psycho-social impairment • Partial PTSD • Threshold for full PTSD may be too high • Impairment still seen (e.g., anger) American Psychiatric Association (APA), 2000; Berstein et al., 2007; Mitka, 2008; Galea et al., 2003; Stein et al., 1997
Identified Traumatic Stress Trends • Chronic PTSD (> 3 months) • Acute PTSD (> 1 Month) • Resistant • Resilient APA, 2000; Bonnano, 2004; Norris et al., 2009
Hyper-Arousal Re-experiencing / Intrusive Thoughts Avoidance / Numbing Core Trauma Symptoms
PERI Trauma (Immediate) Considerations • Unpredictable and Un-controllable • Subjective exposure • Fear • Helplessness • Horror • Direct forms of Trauma (e.g., assault, terrorism) • Indirect forms of Trauma (e.g., witnessing, media, trauma by proxy-such as family member) • Subjective interpretation Breslau et al., 2004; Gray et al., 2004; Gabriel et al., 2007; Suvak et al., 2008; Collimore et al., 2008; Foa & Riggs, 1995; Weathers & Keane, 2007
PRE-Trauma Risk Factors • Demographic risk factors (e.g., female gender) • Exposure to multiple traumata (re-exposure) • Anxiety disorders rarely present in pure form • Pre-existing anxiety disorders may worsen traumatic stress after exposure • Anxiety Sensitivity predisposes to traumatic stress after exposure • Depression • Unclear if PRE or POST factor • Depression highly comorbid with TS post-event (correlation) • May worsen traumatic stress Brewin et al., 2000; Ozer et al., 2003; Norris et al., 2003b; Dunner, 2001; Goldenberg et al., 1996; Elwood et al., 2009; Gabriel et al., 2007; Jaycox et al., 2003; Collimore et al., 2008; Breslau et al., 1997; Breslau et al., 1991; Breslau et al, 2000
PRE-Trauma Sources of Coping • Social support strongly buffers against traumatic stress • Coping in uncontrollable situations • Problem focused (limited in uncontrollable situations) • Emotion-focused • Active • Self distraction (+ or -) • Venting (+ or -) • Cognitive acceptance of situation/experience ( + or -) • Avoidance based • Denial ( generally - ) • Giving up/feeling hopeless ( - ) • Self-blame ( - ) • Substance use ( - ) Brewin et al., 2000; Lazarus & Folkman, 1984; Solomon, 1989; Carver et al., 1989
Unique Opportunity • Virtually no empirical study of psycho-social impact of cartel related violence in the Americas • Limited knowledge of real-time (daily) impact • Memory distortion after the fact (e.g., months, years, melding of traumas? Such as in VHA situation) • More refined understanding of impact of ongoing traumatic situations Nisbett & Wilson, 1977; Wolfer, 1999
Preliminary Study of Ongoing Traumatic Stress • Assess Ongoing Traumatic Stress (OTS) • Examine impact of factors commonly associated with PTSD in: • Ongoing (daily) Traumatic Stress • Ongoing (daily) Re-experiencing symptoms • Ongoing (daily) Avoidance symptoms • Ongoing (daily) Hyperarousal symptoms
Participants • N = 121 (N days = 816) • Inclusion Criteria • Travel/live in Cd. Juárez at least 3 days/week • Internet access at least every 24 hour period • Bilingual • UTEP student • Comfort with online survey; anonymity/confidentiality • Post-hoc advantage; could still recruit after UTEP travel ban • Compensation: $40USD giftcard to Target OR 4 experimental credits
Measures: Main Outcome • All measures professionally translated and back-translated with subsequent native Spanish speakers’ input on items • Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist (PCLS) • Specific event-adapted for CARV: “…violenciarelacionado con el narcotrafico u hostilidad y maltratomilitar.” • Past 30 day Acute PTSD (α = .89) • Adapted version for daily traumatic stress for past 24 hours (PCLSD): αrange = .91 - .94 Brislin, 1970; Liu, 2002;Weatherset al., 1993 Ruggiero et al., 2003; Orlando & Marshall, 2002
Background Measures • Life Events Checklist (LEC) documents 17 traumatic events often associated with PTSD • Experienced Directly (direct) • Witnessed (indirect) • Learned of/Heard about (indirect) • Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scale (DASS) • Depression (α = .86) • Anxiety (α = .78) • General Stress (α = .85) Gray et al., 2004; Lovibond & Lovibond, 1995; Crawford & Henry, 2003; Daza et al., 2002
Background Measures Continued • Multi-dimensional Scale of Social Support (MSPSS) • Family (α = .89) • Friends (α = .96) • Significant Other (α = .92) • Brief COPE coping measure (BCOPE); Carver encourages malleability given nuances of coping • Problem Focused Coping (α = .78) • Emotion Focused Active Coping (α = .73) • Avoidance Coping (α = .76) Zimet et al., 1988; Carver et al., 1997, Schneider et al., 2007; Perczek et al., 2000
Daily Assessment • Completed online >24 hours for 7 days • PCLSD (daily traumatic stress) • Time-varying explanatory covariates • Travel to CJ (# hours) • Reasons for being in CJ (family, friends, business, antro/club/bar) • Perceived degree of exposure to violence (fear, helplessness, horror)
Lemonade out of Lemons • Drop out rarely positive outcome, but allows unique analysis in present study • 20% did not return for follow-up • Unique opportunity in trauma study • Avoidance unpleasantness drop-out? • Re-experiencing unpleasantness drop-out? • Hyper-arousal unpleasantness drop-out?
Informative Drop-Out • Diggle-Kenward Selection Model (DKSM) • Single covariate entered due to estimation complexity: Past 30 day traumatic stress (PCLS) • Survival indicator from daily reports 3 to 4 constrained to be 0; no drop-out in interval • To allow estimation, only intercept allowed to co-vary with past 30 day acute PCLS scores • Drop-out unassociated with traumatic stress, all Zs < |.65|, all ps > .52 • Take Home Point: Preliminary support that asking about trauma on a daily basis does not make it worse for those assessed. Rubin, 1976; Molenberghs, Michiels, Kenward, & Diggle, 1998; Diggle & Kenward, 1994
Approach to Analysis: • Multi-level modeling • Specified Expectation-Maximization in Maximum Likelihood; robust to MAR • Grand Mean centered variables • Standardized (N~0,1) covariates to give common scale to psychological factors • OPTS dependent variable (PCLSD) • Condition on demographics, LEC, DASS, MSPSSfactors, BCOPE sub-scales • Time varying covariates • Presence in CJ (hours) • Perceived exposure to violence occurring (fear, helplessness, and horror) Snijders & Bosker, 1999; Gardiner, Luo, & Roman, 2009
Predicting Ongoing (Daily) Traumatic Stress Response Symptoms