1. A qualitative analysis of posttraumatic stress among Mexican victims of disaster.
- Author
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Norris FH, Weisshaar DL, Conrad ML, Diaz EM, Murphy AD, and Lbañez GE
- Subjects
- Adult, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Culture, Female, Florida epidemiology, Humans, Male, Mexico epidemiology, Disasters, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic psychology, Survivors psychology
- Abstract
In unstructured interviews, 24 Mexicans described survivors' responses to disasters in Guadalajara, Jalisco (n = 9), Homestead, Florida (n = 6), and Puerto Angel, Oaxaca (n = 9). This analysis assessed the extent to which symptom descriptions corresponded to the 17 criterion symptoms of PTSD. Nineteen participants (79%) mentioned from 1 to 9 criterion symptoms. Event-related distress, hypervigilance, recurrent recollections, and avoiding reminders were described most often. Only 3 criterion symptoms were never described. Twenty participants (83%) provided 109 separate expressions that could not be classified specifically as criterion symptoms. These phrases were sorted by 9 independent Mexican volunteers and cluster analyzed. Clusters composed of ataques de nervios, depression, lasting trauma, and somatic complaints provided the best description of the data.
- Published
- 2001
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