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Physical Health Effects of Traumatic Exposure

Physical Health Effects of Traumatic Exposure. Paula P. Schnurr, Ph.D. National Center for PTSD Executive Division, & Dartmouth Medical School. To increase understanding that: trauma is related to poor health a person’s reaction--PTSD especially--mediates the effect of exposure

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Physical Health Effects of Traumatic Exposure

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  1. Physical Health Effects of Traumatic Exposure Paula P. Schnurr, Ph.D. National Center for PTSD Executive Division, & Dartmouth Medical School

  2. To increase understanding that: trauma is related to poor health a person’s reaction--PTSD especially--mediates the effect of exposure there are plausible mechanisms through which PTSD could promote health Premise: Good clinical practice is informed by research findings Presentation Goals

  3. “It’s all in your head…” “You’re not really sick, it’s just stress…” “OK, you’re sick, but it’s only because you’re stressed…” Common Views About How Mental States Affect Health

  4. Example:How Depression (vs. Smoking) Affects Coronary Disease Onset 3 Smoking (US 2.5 Surgeon General) 2 Passive Smoking 1.5 (He et al., 1999) 1 Depression 0.5 (Wulsin et al., 2003) 0 Risk All p < .05

  5. Influence Due to Mental HealthExample Self-reports Symptoms +++ PILL, SCL-90 Global status ++ SF-36 Functioning ++ SF-36 Conditions + “Has a doctor ever told you that you have...?” Utilization+ Self-report, database Morbidity Physician exam (+) Review of systems Laboratory tests 0 EKG Mortality0 Standardized mortality ratio What Are Health Outcomes?

  6. Direct Survivor physically harmed by trauma Less common Health problems related to trauma Medical problems part of survivor identity Indirect Survivor not physically harmed by trauma More common Health problems unrelated to trauma Trauma in Relation to Illness and Injury

  7. Self- Report Utilization Morbidity Mortality Military ++ + +/- + Sexual ++ ++ +/- NA Disaster ++ ++ + +/- Other ++ NA + + ++ = clear association, + = probable association, +/- = inconsistent information, NA = insufficient information Findings on Trauma and Poor Health

  8. Health Outcomes as a Function of Childhood Trauma

  9. Health Risk Behaviors as a Function of Childhood Trauma

  10. Wartime Stress and Coronary Artery Disease in Civilians(Sibai et al., 1989) Cases more likely than controls to have high exposure to war stressors

  11. 10-Year Mortality in War-Exposed Civilians(Sibai et al., 2001)

  12. How does traumatic exposure lead to poor health? Questions???

  13. How Does Trauma Lead to Poor Health?The Role of Distress as a Mediator Physical Health Outcome Stressful Event D is t r es s T ra u ma P T SD He a l t h

  14. PTSD as a Mediator of the Relationship Between Warzone Exposure and Health in Female Veterans(Wolfe et al., 1994) .42** Higher WZE associated with a greater number of medical conditions (adjusted for age and education) WZ # M ed i cal Exposure Conditions

  15. . 42** WZ # M e d i c al Effect of WZE declined from .42** to .08 when PTSD added Exposure C ondi t ion s . 08 WZ # M e d i c al Exposure C ondi t ion s PT S D S x s PTSD as a Mediator of the Relationship Between Warzone Exposure and Health in Female Veterans(Wolfe et al., 1994)

  16. Self- Report Utilization Morbidity Mortality Military ++ + + + Sexual ++ + + NA Disaster + + + NA Other + + + NA ++ = clear association, + = probable association, NA = insufficient information Findings on PTSD and Poor Health

  17. Odds of Self-Reported Medical Disorder Due to PTSD in Female Vietnam Veterans(Wolfe et al., 1994) OR indicates change associated w/1.0 SD in PTSD symptoms * *p < .05 * * * * Adjusted for age, education, and WZE

  18. Adjusted Odds of Self-Reported Medical Disorder Due to PTSD in Vietnam Veterans(Boscarino, 1997) * * * * * * *p < .05

  19. SF-36 Scores in Mustard Gas Exposed Veterans(Schnurr et al., 2000)

  20. Predicted Physical Symptoms, Age 65 Retirement(Schnurr et al., 2005)

  21. Adjusted Annual Cost Ratios in Female HMO Enrollees(Walker et al., 2003) * PCL med = 30-44, high = 45+ * * * *p < .05 adjusted for demographics, chronic disease, and mental health

  22. PTSD and Hazard of Physician-Diagnosed Disease in Older Veterans(Schnurr, Spiro, & Paris, 2000) Hazard is expressed per 10-pt increase in PTSD sxs and is adjusted for age, BMI, smoking, and alcohol consumption *p < .05 * * * *

  23. PTSD and Arterial Disorder in Older Veterans(Schnurr et al., 2000)

  24. Odds of Physician-Diagnosed Disorder as a Function of PTSD Diagnosis(Ouimette et al., 2004) *p < .05, adjusted for age, smoking, alcohol, BMI * * Gender did not moderate the effects of PTSD

  25. Mortality Due to PTSD in Vietnam Veterans(Bullman & Kang, 1994) * * *p < .05

  26. How does traumatic exposure lead to poor health? Are the effects of PTSD unique from the effects of other psychiatric disorders? Questions???

  27. Effects of PTSD and Depression on SF-36 Physical Component Scores in Female Veterans(Frayne et al., 2004)

  28. Odds of Cardiovascular Problems in Vietnam Veterans with PTSD(Boscarino & Chang, 1999) N = 4,462 Adjusted for demographic, military, and health risk covariates. *p < .05

  29. Medical Service Utilization in Male Vietnam Veterans (Schnurr et al., 2000) *p < .05

  30. How does traumatic exposure lead to poor health? Are the effects of PTSD unique from the effects of other psychiatric disorders? How does PTSD lead to poor health? Questions???

  31. Case-Control Study of High v. Low VA Healthcare Users(Deykin et al., 2001) OR of PTSD in High v. Low Users = 2.17 Effects of PTSD on number of medical conditions both direct and mediated through depression

  32. Effects of PTSD and Depression on Health Status in Peacekeepers(Asmundson et al., 2002) Alcohol Use .17* Poor Health .24* PTSD .81* .40* Depression *p < .01

  33. Possible Ways PTSD Could Affect Health

  34. Homeostasis: body maintains constancy within a tight range (e.g., Cannon, 1929) Allostasis: body increases or decreases vital functions within an operating range, in response to environmental challenge (Sterling & Eyer, 1988) Dynamic Regulation of Body Systems

  35. “The strain on the body produced by repeated up and downs of physiologic response, as well as the elevated activity of physiologic systems under challenge, and the changes in metabolism and wear and tear on a number of organs and tissues” – McEwen & Stellar, 1993 A Unifying Mechanism: Allostatic Load

  36. Allostasis and Allostatic Load

  37. Effect of Allostatic Load on Incidence of Cardiovascular Disease(Seeman et al., 1997)

  38. PTSD and Allostatic Load (Schnurr & Jankowski, 1999) other risk factors Threshold for illness  sympathetic activation  self-medication (smoking & drinking)  stress due to drinking consequences Allostatic Load

  39. Multifactorial Model of Trauma, PTSD, & Health(Schnurr & Green, 2004) Attentional Processes Illness PTSD Behavior Psychological Health Risk Behaviors Alterations Biological Alterations Disease Exposure

  40. (1) Exposure affects health primarily through PTSD and other distress reactions Attentional Processes Illness PTSD Behavior Psychological Health Risk Alterations Behaviors Biological Alterations Disease Exposure

  41. (2) PTSD and distress reactions affect illness behavior by altering symptom perception Attentional Processes Illness PTSD Behavior Psychological Health Risk Alterations Behaviors Biological Alterations Disease Exposure

  42. (3) Effects of PTSD on disease are mediated through interdependent psychological, biological, and behavioral mechanisms

  43. Traumatic exposure is related to poor health A person’s reaction–PTSD especially–mediates the effect of exposure There are plausible mechanisms through which PTSD could promote poor health Summary

  44. Treatment Issues: Two Scenarios Medical problems in trauma patients Trauma problems in medical patients In either case, MH providers need to address medical problems & work with medical staff

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