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Journal Article

Citation

Corbin T, Tabb LP, Waite D, Purtle J, Harris E, Gardner J, Gentile N, Rowhani-Rahbar A, Rich J. J. Health Care Poor Underserved 2021; 32(3): 1339-1358.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Johns Hopkins University Press)

DOI

10.1353/hpu.2021.0136

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Survivors of violence often suffer psychological harm in addition to physical wounds. This study explored (1) the prevalence of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) symptoms, depression symptoms, and disordered sleep among young, violently injured, emergency department patients; and (2) how PTSD and depression symptoms are associated with sleep quality. Clinical scales for PTSD (PCL-5), depression (PHQ-8), and sleep (PROMISĀ®) were completed by 88 survivors of violent assault (gunshot, stabbing or assault) one month or less after presenting to an urban emergency department. High proportions of participants met criteria for prospective PTSD (59.1%), major depression (44.3%) or disordered sleep (34.1%), with 27.3% meeting criteria for all three conditions. Poorer sleep quality was correlated with higher levels of depression symptoms and PTSD symptoms. Survivors of violence experience symptoms that may further impair their sleep and behavioral health. Emergency providers should ask survivors about sleep/trauma symptoms and consider referral to trauma-informed behavioral health care.


Language: en

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