Use of two PTSD scales in assessing posttraumatic stress disorder in refugees and displaced persons from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia (CROSBI ID 242801)
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Marušić, Ana ; Kozarić-Kovačić, Dragic ; Folnegović-Šmalc, Vera ; Ljubin, Tajana ; Zrnčić, A ; Ljubin, Sunčanica
engleski
Use of two PTSD scales in assessing posttraumatic stress disorder in refugees and displaced persons from Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia
Two PTSD scales, Mississippi and Watson’s, were used for evaluating the prevalence of PTSD in a sample of 73 refugees and displaced persons accommodated in two refugee camps in Zagreb, Croatia. The prevalence of PTSD in the studied sample was 38.4% according to the Mississippi scale and 37.0% according to the Watson’s scale. Seventy-seven percent of the subjects had identical positive/negative PTSD evaluation on both scales. There was statistically significant correlation between the intensity of PTSD symptoms measured by the two scales. The result on the Watson’s PTSD scale, but not that on the Mississippi scale, correlated with the number of survived traumatic events. In conclusion, both PTSD scales demonstrated good psychometric characteristics in the refugee population from Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina.
PTSD, measurement, refugees, war
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