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Journal Article

Citation

Vandentorren S, Pirard P, Sanna A, Aubert L, Motreff Y, Dantchev N, Lesieur S, Chauvin P, Baubet T. Br. J. Psychiatry 2018; 212(4): 207-214.

Affiliation

Inserm 1178,Université Paris 13,Paris,France and Hopital Avicenne,Bobigny,France.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Royal College of Psychiatry)

DOI

10.1192/bjp.2017.63

PMID

29557760

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Terrorist attacks occurred in Paris in January 2015. Aims To assess the mental health impact and the access to psychomedical care of people exposed to the attacks.

METHOD: We implemented an open-cohort design 6 and 18 months after the attacks. Exposed civilians and rescue workers were included according to the exposure criteria A for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in DSM-5. A face-to-face questionnaire conducted by trained psychologists was used to collect sociodemographic characteristics, exposure level, scores on psychometric scales, an international neuropsychiatric interview and access to care.

RESULTS: Six months after the attacks, 18% of civilians reported symptoms of PTSD, 31% had anxiety disorders and 11% depression. Among rescue workers, 3% reported symptoms of PTSD and 14% anxiety disorders. During the 48 h following the attacks, 53.2% of civilian had access to psychomedical care v. 35% of rescue and police staff.

CONCLUSIONS: We found severe psychological consequences, even in people who were less exposed. Declaration of interest None.


Language: en

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