domingo, 30 de abril de 2017

Study suggests almost 55,000 Norwegians suffer from PTSD

Study suggests almost 55,000 Norwegians suffer from PTSD

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Study suggests almost 55,000 Norwegians suffer from PTSD

The number of adults in Norway who suffer from PTSD is equivalent to practically an entire year class of Norwegians, claims a new study.
Disaster, rapes, and threats. Sexual abuse, natural disasters, and violence. Fear-arousing events such as these are what we call traumas. Some people who have experienced them subsequently suffer from health problems that physicians call post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.
Typical symptoms include intrusive memories and nightmares, "numbness" and emotional blunting, reduced reactions to the environment, lack of feelings of pleasure and joy, distancing oneself from others and avoidance of situations that remind the victim of the trauma.
"Here in Norway, this is not a widespread illness, thankfully. But now we have shown that even in peaceful Norway, far more people suffer PTSD than, for example, lung cancer or bowel cancer," says SINTEF health services researcher Eva Lassemo.
Symptoms that last for 11 years
Lassemo has been involved in Norway's first population study of PTSD. She is lead author of a recent article in the journal "Social Psychiatry & Psychiatric Epidemiology", in which she and three colleagues from the University of Tromsø, the Norwegian Cancer Register and Nordland County Hospital describe how they analyzed the responses to interviews with a representative sample of the Norwegian population.
The data show that many people who suffer from PTSD are unable to find any quick-fix way of overcoming their problems. The people in the sample who had PTSD had struggled to deal with their symptoms for 11 years or more on average.
This has created an accumulation effect since, in addition to the new cases that occur every year, many people have not been able to rid themselves of a long-standing problem.
An entire birth cohort of sufferers
The data used by the research team was derived from standardized interviews that experienced interviewers held with 1600 Norwegians. In the course of conversations that lasted for between two and three hours, the informants provided answers; first, as to whether they had ever experienced traumas, and if so, when. Secondly, whether the traumas had resulted in unpleasant after-effects, and if so, from when. The third line of questioning concerned how long the medical consequences had lasted.
The researchers used standard statistical procedures (see fact-box) to transform the responses into figures representative of the total population of Norway. The results showed that every year, around 22,360 adult Norwegians are exposed to potentially traumatic situations, and that almost 2500 new cases of PTSD occur in the Norwegian population every year.
"After we had worked out the figure for the annual number of incident cases, we were able to estimate the prevalence for 2015, because we could also see how long the symptoms lasted on average. The final figure suggests that a total of almost 55,000 Norwegians were suffering from PTSD as recently as the year before last. This is equivalent to the total number of Norwegians born within the course of a year," says Lassemo.
Intentional acts are worst
The interviews that the study is based on were carried out by the University of Oslo, and the material will be a databank for researchers who wish to make use of it in the future. Since the interviews were held as long ago as 2000 and 2001 they reflect a Norway that had yet to experience the 2011 Utøya tragedy (when 69 young people at a Labour Party summer camp on the island of Utøya near Oslo were massacred by a lone ultra-right-wing terrorist), and that had not yet sent its soldiers to Iraq or Afghanistan.
The recent analysis of the interviews that were carried out by Lassemo and her colleagues, show that the risk of developing PTSD is greatest if the frightening event was deliberately directed at the victim.
"Our informants' responses make it quite clear that people are less vulnerable if they are exposed to an unpleasant event that affects them accidentally or at random," says Eva Lassemo.
Bright spot in the darkness
According to the health services researcher, the fact that deliberate acts are most likely to trigger stress is actually something of a bright spot. This is because such events can be prevented:
"Campaigns aimed at modifying attitudes can reduce the incidence of rape, and sexual abuse can be limited if awareness of the phenomenon is increased, while it is more difficult to do anything about the danger of being exposed to accidents or natural catastrophes."
Contacting your doctor can help
We do not know how many adults with PTSD are identified by Norwegian health services. This is primarily because diagnoses made by their regular physicians do not end up in a central archive.
"Do the data indicate that people who seek help from the health services get over their symptoms more quickly than those who don't contact a doctor?
"We haven't specifically studied this, but even without in-depth analyses, we can see that there is a tendency for people who contact their doctor following a traumatic experience to suffer from PTSD for a shorter period of time."
Reliable sample?
"Can we be certain that studies of representative samples will give us reliable figures for the population as a whole?
"If you want to find out the full and complete truth about all the inhabitants of country, you will obtain the most faithful picture by interviewing each and every one of them. However, the world of research doesn't have the resources to do anything like that. Certainly, the figures could have been a bit different if we had interviewed a different sample of 1600 people. But in theory, a representative sample ought to be a good reflection of a whole population."
Lassemo explains that it is possible that some minor biases still remain, and she believes that this study may actually offer a slightly too positive picture of the real situation.
"Of all the persons who were asked to take part, 74 per cent said that they were willing to do so. There are good reasons to believe that these were among the healthiest of the people we contacted. Another thing is that people needed to understand Norwegian in order to be interviewed. On the other hand, the proportion of immigrants was lower in 2000 and 2001, when the interviews took place, than it is today. So all in all, there is reason to believe that the data give us a fairly good picture of Norway as it was, ten years before Utøya," says Eva Lassemo.
Many unrecognized cases, says expert
In Stjørdal, in the County of Nord-Trøndelag in Mid Norway, psychiatric nurse Ann-Inger Leirtrø has led the city's district psychiatric center for the past ten years. She says that it will always be difficult to judge what proportion of people affected by PTSD are offered treatment.
"A lot of people are probably diagnosed with anxiety, depression or personality disorders without these being recognized as the result of a traumatic experience. This is because acts of violence and abuse committed by close relations are regarded as being so shameful and taboo that many victims are unwilling to mention them at all. For the same reason, many people continue to suffer from PTSD in silence, without even being identified and treated by the health services. All this means that many cases are not recorded," says Leirtrø.
The number of cases of PTSD diagnosed by the specialist health service in Leirtrø's own county of Nord-Trøndelag has risen from 128 in 2010 to 242 in 2016.
"Part of the reason for this increase is probably that many members of our treatment teams have taken courses in PTSD in the course of the past few years, which has made them more aware of this type of disorder," says Ann-Inger Leirtrø.

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