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Coping with post-traumatic stress: young, middle-aged and elderly comparisons

✍ Scribed by Man Cheung Chung; Julie Werrett; Yvette Easthope; Steven Farmer


Book ID
102225337
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2004
Tongue
English
Weight
104 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objectives

Debate persists about whether people of different ages react similarly to traumatic events, and whether elderly people are more vulnerable to such events, or better able to cope with them. The first aim of this paper was to shed light on this debate by comparing the post‐traumatic responses of young, middle‐aged and elderly community residents who had been exposed to technological disasters. The second aim was to differentiate between these three age groups in terms of coping strategies.

Methods

One hundred and forty‐eight community residents, who were exposed to two technological disasters, participated in the study. They were assessed using the Impact of Event Scale (IES), the General Health Questionnaire (GHQ‐28) and the Ways of Coping Checklists (WOC).

Results

The results showed that in terms of IES, GHQ and WOC scores, no significant differences were found across the three age groups. However, main effects were found according to type of disaster and intensity of exposure to disaster. One significant interaction effect was that residents exposed to the aircraft crash used significantly more confrontive coping than those exposed to the train collision, in all three age groups. Correlation coefficients results showed that for all three age groups, on the whole, the more they experienced intrusive thoughts and avoidance behaviour, the more they experienced general health problems.

Conclusions

Following exposure to technological disasters, young, middle‐aged and elderly community residents could display similar post‐traumatic responses and employ similar coping strategies, which contradicts the vulnerability hypothesis and the inoculation hypothesis. Copyright © 2004 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


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