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The geography of post-disaster mental health: spatial patterning of psychological vulnerability and resilience factors in New York City after Hurricane Sandy

机译:灾后心理健康的地理环境:飓风桑迪过后纽约市心理脆弱性和恢复力因素的空间格局

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Background Only very few studies have investigated the geographic distribution of psychological resilience and associated mental health outcomes after natural or man made disasters. Such information is crucial for location-based interventions that aim to promote recovery in the aftermath of disasters. The purpose of this study therefore was to investigate geographic variability of (1) posttraumatic stress (PTS) and depression in a Hurricane Sandy affected population in NYC and (2) psychological vulnerability and resilience factors among affected areas in NYC boroughs. Methods Cross-sectional telephone survey data were collected 13 to 16 months post-disaster from household residents (N?=?418 adults) in NYC communities that were most heavily affected by the hurricane. The Posttraumatic Stress Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5) was applied for measuring posttraumatic stress and the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) was used for measuring depression. We applied spatial autocorrelation and spatial regimes regression analyses, to test for spatial clusters of mental health outcomes and to explore whether associations between vulnerability and resilience factors and mental health differed among New York City’s five boroughs. Results Mental health problems clustered predominantly in neighborhoods that are geographically more exposed towards the ocean indicating a spatial variation of risk within and across the boroughs. We further found significant variation in associations between vulnerability and resilience factors and mental health. Race/ethnicity (being Asian or non-Hispanic black) and disaster-related stressors were vulnerability factors for mental health symptoms in Queens, and being employed and married were resilience factors for these symptoms in Manhattan and Staten Island. In addition, parental status was a vulnerability factor in Brooklyn and a resilience factor in the Bronx. Conclusions We conclude that explanatory characteristics may manifest as psychological vulnerability and resilience factors differently across different regional contexts. Our spatial epidemiological approach is transferable to other regions around the globe and, in the light of a changing climate, could be used to strengthen the psychosocial resources of demographic groups at greatest risk of adverse outcomes pre-disaster. In the aftermath of a disaster, the approach can be used to identify survivors at greatest risk and to plan for targeted interventions to reach them.
机译:背景技术很少有研究调查自然或人为灾难后心理弹性的地理分布以及相关的心理健康结果。此类信息对于旨在促进灾难后恢复的基于位置的干预至关重要。因此,本研究的目的是调查(1)纽约市飓风桑迪影响人群的创伤后应激(PTS)和抑郁状况的地理变异性,以及(2)纽约市辖区受影响地区之间的心理脆弱性和适应力因素。方法横断面电话调查数据是在灾后13到16个月内从受飓风影响最严重的纽约市居民家庭(N = 418位成人)中收集的。将DSM-5的创伤后压力检查表(PCL-5)用于测量创伤后压力,并使用九项患者健康调查表(PH​​Q-9)来测量抑郁症。我们应用了空间自相关和空间体制回归分析,以测试心理健康结果的空间集群,并探讨脆弱性和适应力因素与心理健康之间的关联在纽约市五个行政区之间是否存在差异。结果心理健康问题主要集中在地理上更靠近海洋的社区中,这表明各行政区内和行政区之间风险的空间变化。我们进一步发现脆弱性和适应力因素与心理健康之间的关联存在显着差异。种族/民族(亚裔或非西班牙裔黑人)和与灾难相关的压力源是皇后区心理健康症状的脆弱性因素,而被雇用和结婚是曼哈顿和史坦顿岛这些症状的复原力因素。此外,父母身分是布鲁克林的脆弱性因素,而布朗克斯则是韧性的因素。结论我们得出结论,解释性特征可能表现为不同地区背景下心理脆弱性和适应力因素的不同。我们的空间流行病学方法可以转移到全球其他地区,并且鉴于气候变化,可以用来加强人口最大的灾前不良后果风险人群的社会心理资源。在灾难之后,该方法可用于识别风险最高的幸存者,并计划针对性的干预措施以使他们幸免。

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