Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis

Background: Individuals express symptoms of posttraumatic stress in various ways, noted for example in the many symptom combinations in the diagnostic manuals. Studies aiming to examine differences of symptom presentations by extracting latent classes or profiles indicate both the presence of subtyp...

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Main Authors: Kristina Bondjers, Mimmie Willebrand, Filip K. Arnberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-01-01
Series:European Journal of Psychotraumatology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2018.1546083
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spelling doaj-62d69105989644d4bcbbb22ebde935fe2020-11-25T01:32:38ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEuropean Journal of Psychotraumatology2000-81982000-80662018-01-019110.1080/20008198.2018.15460831546083Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysisKristina Bondjers0Mimmie Willebrand1Filip K. Arnberg2Uppsala UniversityUppsala UniversityUppsala UniversityBackground: Individuals express symptoms of posttraumatic stress in various ways, noted for example in the many symptom combinations in the diagnostic manuals. Studies aiming to examine differences of symptom presentations by extracting latent classes or profiles indicate both the presence of subtypes with differing symptomatology and subtypes distinguished by severity levels. Few studies have examined subtype associations with long-term outcomes. Objective: The current study aimed to apply latent profile analysis on posttraumatic stress (PTS) in a highly homogenous sample of Swedish tourists exposed to the 2004 Southeast Asia tsunami and to examine if classes differed in their long-term outcome. Methods: An latent profile analysis was conducted using self-report data collected one year after the disaster from 1638 highly exposed survivors that endorsed ≥ 1 symptom of PTS. Associations were examined between the classes and predictors of PTS (loss of a relative or friend, subjective life threat) and levels of PTS at a three-year follow up. Results: The latent profile analysis indicated four classes: minimal, low, moderate, and severe symptoms. The classes were distinguished mainly by their levels of PTS. Loss of a relative or friend and subjective life threat were associated with a higher likelihood of belonging to any other class than the minimal class. The severity level of the classes at one year were predictive of PTS severity at the three-year follow-up. Conclusions: Homogeneous profiles of posttraumatic stress differing mainly in symptom severity were found in this sample of disaster survivors. Profile diversity may be related to sample variation and unmeasured confounders rather than reflect qualitatively different disorders.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2018.1546083PTSDposttraumatic stresstraumalatent profile analysisnatural disasterlongitudinal study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kristina Bondjers
Mimmie Willebrand
Filip K. Arnberg
spellingShingle Kristina Bondjers
Mimmie Willebrand
Filip K. Arnberg
Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
European Journal of Psychotraumatology
PTSD
posttraumatic stress
trauma
latent profile analysis
natural disaster
longitudinal study
author_facet Kristina Bondjers
Mimmie Willebrand
Filip K. Arnberg
author_sort Kristina Bondjers
title Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
title_short Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
title_full Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
title_fullStr Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
title_full_unstemmed Similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
title_sort similarity in symptom patterns of posttraumatic stress among disaster-survivors: a three-step latent profile analysis
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series European Journal of Psychotraumatology
issn 2000-8198
2000-8066
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Background: Individuals express symptoms of posttraumatic stress in various ways, noted for example in the many symptom combinations in the diagnostic manuals. Studies aiming to examine differences of symptom presentations by extracting latent classes or profiles indicate both the presence of subtypes with differing symptomatology and subtypes distinguished by severity levels. Few studies have examined subtype associations with long-term outcomes. Objective: The current study aimed to apply latent profile analysis on posttraumatic stress (PTS) in a highly homogenous sample of Swedish tourists exposed to the 2004 Southeast Asia tsunami and to examine if classes differed in their long-term outcome. Methods: An latent profile analysis was conducted using self-report data collected one year after the disaster from 1638 highly exposed survivors that endorsed ≥ 1 symptom of PTS. Associations were examined between the classes and predictors of PTS (loss of a relative or friend, subjective life threat) and levels of PTS at a three-year follow up. Results: The latent profile analysis indicated four classes: minimal, low, moderate, and severe symptoms. The classes were distinguished mainly by their levels of PTS. Loss of a relative or friend and subjective life threat were associated with a higher likelihood of belonging to any other class than the minimal class. The severity level of the classes at one year were predictive of PTS severity at the three-year follow-up. Conclusions: Homogeneous profiles of posttraumatic stress differing mainly in symptom severity were found in this sample of disaster survivors. Profile diversity may be related to sample variation and unmeasured confounders rather than reflect qualitatively different disorders.
topic PTSD
posttraumatic stress
trauma
latent profile analysis
natural disaster
longitudinal study
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2018.1546083
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AT filipkarnberg similarityinsymptompatternsofposttraumaticstressamongdisastersurvivorsathreesteplatentprofileanalysis
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