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- Title
Exposure to Trauma and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptoms in Older Veterans Attending Primary Care: Comorbid Conditions and Self-Rated Health Status.
- Authors
Durai, U. Nalla B.; Chopra, Mohit P.; Coakley, Eugenie; Llorente, Maria D.; Kirchner, JoAnn E.; Cook, Joan M.; Levkoff, Sue E.
- Abstract
Assess the prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptomatology and its association with health characteristics in a geriatric primary care population. Cross-sectional screening assessments during a multisite trial for the treatment of depression, anxiety, and at-risk drinking. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)-based primary care clinics across the United States. Seventeen thousand two hundred five veterans aged 65 and older. Sociodemographic information, the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12), questions about death wishes and suicidal ideation, quantity and frequency of alcohol use, smoking, exposure to traumatic events, and PTSD symptom clusters. Twelve percent (2,041/17,205) of participants screened endorsed PTSD symptoms. Veterans with PTSD symptoms from some ( partial PTSD) or each ( PTSD all clusters) of the symptom clusters were significantly more likely to report poor general health, currently smoke, be divorced, report little or no social support, and have a higher prevalence of mental distress, death wishes, and suicidal ideation than those with no trauma history or those with trauma but no symptoms. Group differences were most pronounced for mental distress and least for at-risk drinking. Presence of PTSD all clusters was associated with poorer outcomes on all of the above-mentioned health characteristics than partial PTSD. PTSD symptoms are common in a substantial minority of older veterans in primary care, and careful inquiry about these symptoms is important for comprehensive assessment in geriatric populations.
- Subjects
ELDER care; CLINICAL trials; ALCOHOL drinking; VETERANS; MEDICAL cooperation; MEDICAL screening; POST-traumatic stress disorder; PRIMARY health care; PROBABILITY theory; RESEARCH; RESEARCH funding; TIME; WOUNDS &; injuries; LOGISTIC regression analysis; SOCIOECONOMIC factors; SUICIDAL ideation; CROSS-sectional method; OLD age
- Publication
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2011, Vol 59, Issue 6, p1087
- ISSN
0002-8614
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1532-5415.2011.03407.x