Pre-deployment mental health and trauma exposure of expatriate humanitarian aid workers: risk and resilience factors

Abstract
Expatriate aid workers (n = 214) representing 19 nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) completed a predeployment
survey, including measures of mental health (depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress disorder [PTSD]); risk factors
(childhood trauma, family risk, and adult trauma exposure); and resilience factors (coping, social support, and healthy lifestyle)
to assess their baseline mental health during preparation for deployment. Multiple regression analysis indicated that childhood
trauma/family risk was not significantly related to depression, anxiety, or PTSD symptoms when controlling for report of prior
mental illness; yet, adult trauma exposure was significantly related to all three. Social support contributed significant variance
to depression and PTSD. NGOs can help applicants recognize the effects of recent trauma and the resilience provided by a
healthy social network.

Referentie: 
Cynthia B. Eriksson, Barbara Lopes Cardozo, David W. Foy, Miriam Sabin, Alastair Ager, Leslie Snider, Willem F. Scholte, Reinhard Kaiser, Miranda Olff, Bas Rijnen, Carol Gotway Crawford, Julia Zhu, and Winnifred Simon | 2012
In: Traumatology, ISSN 1085-9373
http://tmt.sagepub.com/content/early/2012/03/26/1534765612441978.abstract
Rubriek: Humanitarian Staff Care. Published online before print April 16, 2012
Trefwoorden: 
Humanitarian Staff Care
Affiliatie auteur(s):