Project Details
Description
The bombing of the Israeli civilian population during the Persian Gulf War
offered a unique and important research opportunity to study effects of a
life-threatening experience on a sample of Israel-born adults on whom we
have detailed pre-war baseline data. These pre-war data were collected in
a case/control study of life events and other possible risk factors for
psychiatric disorders, especially schizophrenia, major depression,
antisocial personality and substance use, including alcoholism.
Under a small grant from the NIMH RAPID program, we took the first step to
seize this opportunity. We collected post-war data that included not only
assessments of psychological distress and symptoms of PTSD, but also
extensive measures of the stress process. The respondents were 650 people
from our original sample. The interviewing began on March 20, 1991, 3
weeks after the bombing threat ended, and continued for the following
year.
The RAPID grant provided funds for data collection only. The present
application is for funds to analyze the data. Our aims in these analyses
are to: 1) examine the relationship between objective threat (e.g.,
residence in targeted and bombed areas) and distress (e.g., demoralization
and symptoms of PTSD); 2) test whether the relationships among stress,
social situations, personal disposition, and psychopathology in our
baseline study of more usual stressors are replicated in a situation of
abnormal life threatening stress and, 3) address with prospective analyses
questions raised but unresolved with the retrospective data from the
baseline case/control study.
Our longer term goal is to conduct further follow-up interviews that will
be informed by the results of analyses proposed here. This longer term
follow-up would involve clinical diagnoses by psychiatrists as in the
original baseline study. This would enable us to investigate not only how
past social, psychological and psychiatric factors affect immediate
responses to a life-threatening experience, but also how such responses,
in turn, are related to the future course and development of psychiatric
disorders.
Status | Finished |
---|---|
Effective start/end date | 8/1/93 → 7/31/96 |
Funding
- National Institute of Mental Health
ASJC Scopus Subject Areas
- Psychiatry and Mental health
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