Ten-Year Follow-Up of Earthquake Survivors: Long-Term Study on the Course of PTSD Following a Natural Disaster

Oguz K. Karamustafalıoğlu, Leah Fostick, Mehmet Çevik, Gil Zukerman, Onur Tankaya, Mustafa Güveli, Banadir Bakım, Nesrin Karamustafalıoğlu, Joseph Zohar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objective: Few earthquake survivor studies extend follow-up beyond 2 years, leaving the long-term course of earthquake-related posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) unknown. This 10-year survey re-assessed the 1999 İzmit, Turkey, earthquake survivors. Methods: İzmit earthquake survivors (N = 198), previously assessed for PTSD/partial PTSD at 1–3 months and 18–20 months post-earthquake, were evaluated 10 years post-event from January 2009 through December 2010. A PTSD self-test (Turkish translation) used DSM-IV criteria to characterize full PTSD, “stringent partial PTSD,”“lenient partial PTSD,” or non-PTSD based on symptom type/amount. Results: Full PTSD prevalence decreased from 37% at 1–3 months post-earthquake to 15% at 18–20 months (P< .001), remaining relatively stable (12%) at 10 years (P= .38). Stringent and lenient partial PTSD decreased between 1–3 months and 18–20 months (from 9% to 3% and from 24% to 12%, respectively; P< .001), remaining stable at 10 years (5% and 9%, respectively; P= .43 and P= .89). PTSD was more prevalent at 1–3 months among those who had a close acquaintance harmed, had been evacuated for long periods (> 1 week), or had more children; this was not observed at 10 years (P= .007–.017). Avoidance symptoms 1–3 months post-earthquake were the best predictor for full PTSD at 10 years (P< .001). Delayed-onset PTSD was observed in only 2% of participants. Conclusions: Full and partial PTSD decreased over the first 2 years post-trauma, but remained stable at 10 years, suggesting PTSD symptoms at around 2 years remain stable at 10 years. Background characteristics did not predict PTSD long-term course, but avoidance level did. Delayed-onset PTSD was relatively rare.

Original languageEnglish
Article number22m14377
JournalJournal of Clinical Psychiatry
Volume84
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 20 Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.

Funding

Submitted: January 3, 2022; accepted October 24, 2022. Published online: February 20, 2023. Relevant financial relationships: None. Funding/support: The original post-earthquake survey research (from which an excerpt of data was used for this study) was supported by an unrestricted research grant (no. 10431) from Pfizer Inc, New York, NY. No support was available for this follow-up survey. Role of the sponsor: The supporters had no role in the design, analysis, interpretation, or publication of this study. Additional information: The original data set is available from Karamustafalıoğlu et al.8

FundersFunder number
Pfizer

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