期刊论文详细信息
Conflict and Health
Rwanda – lasting imprints of a genocide: trauma, mental health and psychosocial conditions in survivors, former prisoners and their children
Thomas Elbert1  Heide Rieder1 
[1] Department of Psychology, University of Konstanz, Konstanz, Germany
关键词: Descendants;    Former prisoners;    Genocide survivors;    Risk factors;    Depression;    Anxiety;    PTSD;    Rwanda;   
Others  :  806310
DOI  :  10.1186/1752-1505-7-6
 received in 2012-07-03, accepted in 2013-03-21,  发布年份 2013
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

The 1994 genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda left about one million people dead in a period of only three months. The present study aimed to examine the level of trauma exposure, psychopathology, and risk factors for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in survivors and former prisoners accused of participation in the genocide as well as in their respective descendants.

Methods

A community-based survey was conducted in four sectors of the Muhanga district in the Southern Province of Rwanda from May to July 2010. Genocide survivors (n = 90), former prisoners (n = 83) and their respective descendants were interviewed by trained local psychologists. The PTSD Symptom Scale Interview (PSS-I) was used to assess PTSD, the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL-25) to assess symptoms of depression and anxiety and the relevant section of the M.I.N.I. to assess the risk for suicidality.

Results

Survivors reported that they had experienced on average twelve different traumatic event types in comparison to ten different types of traumatic stressors in the group of former prisoners. According to the PSS-I, the worst events reported by survivors were mainly linked to witnessing violence throughout the period of the genocide, whereas former prisoners emphasized being physically attacked, referring to their time spent in refugee camps or to their imprisonment. In the parent generation, when compared to former prisoners, survivors indicated being more affected by depressive symptoms (M = 20.7 (SD = 7.8) versus M = 19.0 (SD = 6.4), U = 2993, p < .05) and anxiety symptoms (M = 17.2 (SD = 7.6) versus M = 15.4 (SD = 7.8), U = 2951, p < .05) but not with regard to the PTSD diagnosis (25% versus 22%, χ2(1,171) = .182, p = .669).

A regression analysis of the data of the parent generation revealed that the exposure to traumatic stressors, the level of physical illness and the level of social integration were predictors for the symptom severity of PTSD, whereas economic status, age and gender were not. Descendants of genocide survivors presented with more symptoms than descendants of former prisoners with regard to all assessed mental disorders.

Conclusions

Our study demonstrated particular long-term consequences of massive organized violence, such as war and genocide, on mental health and psychosocial conditions. Differences between families of survivors and families of former prisoners accused for participation in the Rwandan genocide are reflected in the mental health of the next generation.

【 授权许可】

   
2013 Rieder and Elbert; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20140708092247615.pdf 611KB PDF download
Figure 3. 29KB Image download
Figure 2. 28KB Image download
Figure 1. 25KB Image download
【 图 表 】

Figure 1.

Figure 2.

Figure 3.

【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Straus S: How many perpetrators were there in the Rwandan genocide? An estimate. Journal of Genocide Research 2004, 6(1):85-98.
  • [2]Human Rights Watch: Justice Compromised. The Legacy of Rwanda’s Community-Based Gacaca Courts. New York: HRW; 2011.
  • [3]Kumar K: Civil Wars, Women, and Gender Relations: An Overview. In Women and Civil War. Impact, Organizations, and Action. Edited by Kumar K. London: Lynne Rienner; 2001:27-38.
  • [4]Dyregrov A, Gupta L, Gjestad R, Mukanoheli E: Trauma exposure and psychological reactions to genocide among Rwandan children. Journal of Traumatic Stress 2000, 13(1):3-21.
  • [5]Schaal S, Elbert T: Ten years after the genocide: trauma confrontation and posttraumatic stress in Rwandan adolescents. Journal of Traumatic Stress 2006, 19(1):95-105.
  • [6]Brounéus K: The trauma of truth telling: effects of witnessing in the Rwandan gacaca courts on psychological health. Journal of Conflict Resolution 2010, 54(3):408-437.
  • [7]Schaal S, Duzingizemungu JP, Jacob N, Elbert T: Rates of trauma spectrum disorders and risks of posttraumatic stress disorder in a sample of orphaned and widowed genocide survivors. European Journal of Psychotraumatology 2011, 2:6343.
  • [8]Staub E: Reconciliation after genocide, mass killing, or intractable conflict: Understanding the roots of violence, psychological recovery, and steps towards a general theory. Political Psychology 2006, 27:867-894.
  • [9]Schaal S, Weierstall R, Duzingizemungu JP, Elbert T: Mental health 15 years after the killings: imprisoned perpetrators of the Rwandan genocide versus a community sample of survivors. Journal of Traumatic Stress 2012, 25:1-8.
  • [10]Jones A: Gender and genocide in Rwanda. Journal of Genocide Research 2002, 4(1):65-94.
  • [11]Mamdani M: When victims become killers: colonialism, nativism, and the genocide in Rwanda. Kampala: Fountain Publishers; 2002.
  • [12]Fujii AL: Killing neighbors: webs of violence in Rwanda. New York: Cornell University Press; 2009.
  • [13]Foa EB, Tolin DF: Comparison of the PTSD symptom scale- interview version and the clinician-administered PTSD scale. Journal of Traumatic Stress 2000, 13(2):181-191.
  • [14]Jacob N: Consequences of traumatic stress in Rwandan genocide survivors: Epidemiology, psychotherapy, and dissemination. Doctoral thesis. University of Konstanz, Department of Psychology; 2009. Available at: http://kops.ub.uni-konstanz.de/handle/urn:nbn:de:bsz:352-opus-106870 webcite
  • [15]Onyut LP, Neuner F, Schauer E, Ertl V, Odenwald M, Schauer M, Elbert T: The nakivale camp mental health project: building local competency for psychological assistance to traumatised refugees. Intervention 2004, 2(2):90-107.
  • [16]Ertl V, Pfeiffer A, Saile R, Schauer E, Elbert T: Validation of a mental health assessment in an African conflict population. Psychological Assessment 2010, 22(2):318-324.
  • [17]Derogatis LR, Lipman RS, Rickels K, Uhlenhuth EH, Covi L: The Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL): a self-report symptom inventory. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science 1974, 19(1):1-15.
  • [18]Nettelbladt P, Hansson L, Stefansson CG, Borgquist L, Nordström G: Test characteristics of the Hopkins Symptom Check List-25 (HSCL-25) in Sweden, using the Present State Examiniation (PSE-9) as a caseness criterion. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 1993, 28:130-133.
  • [19]Smith Fawzi MC, Murphy E, Pham T, Lin L, Poole C, Mollica RF: The validity of screening for post-traumatic stress disorder and major depression among Vietnamese former political prisoners. Acta Psychiatrica Scandnavica 2007, 95(2):87-93.
  • [20]Bolton P, Neugebauer R, Ndogoni L: Prevalence of depression in rural Rwanda based on symptom and functional criteria. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 2002, 190(9):631-637.
  • [21]Sheehan DV, Lecrubier Y, Sheehan H, Amorim P, Janavs J, Weiller E, Hergueta T, Baker R, Dunbar GC: The MINI-International Neuro- psychiatric Interview (MINI): the development and validation of a structured diagnostic psychiatric interview for DSM-IV and ICD-10. Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 1998, 59:22-33.
  • [22]Pham PN, Weinstein HM, Longman T: Trauma and PTSD symptoms in Rwanda. Implications for Attitudes toward Justice and Reconciliation. JAMA 2004, 292:602-612.
  • [23]Programme National de la Santé Mentale (PNSM): Prevalence de l’état de stress post- traumatique dans la population rwandaise. Kigali: Ministère de la Santé; 2009.
  • [24]Munyandamutsa N, Mahoro Nkubamugisha P, Gex-Fabry M, Eytan A: Mental and physical health in Rwanda 14 after the genocide. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 2012.
  • [25]Kolassa IT, Ertl V, Eckart C, Kolassa S, Onyut LP, Elbert T: Spontaneous remission from PTSD depends on the number of traumatic event types experienced. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy 2010, 2(3):169-174.
  • [26]Straus S: The order of Genocide: Race, Power, and War in Rwanda. New York: Cornell University Press; 2006.
  • [27]Des Forges A: Leave none to tell the story. New York: Human Rights Watch and Fédération internationale des ligues des droits de l’homme; 1999.
  • [28]Perkonigg A, Pfister H, Stein MB, Hofler M, Lieb R, Maercker A, Wittchen HU: Longitudinal course of posttraumatic stress disorder and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms in a community sample of adolescents and young adults. American Journal of Psychiatry 2005, 162(7):1320-1327.
  • [29]Hagengimana A, Hinton D, Bird B, Pollack M, Pitman RK: Somatic panic-attack equivalents in a community sample of Rwandan widows who survived the 1994 genocide. Psychiatry Research 2003, 117:1-9.
  • [30]De Lame D: Une colline entre mille ou le calme avant la tempête. Transformations et blocages du Rwanda rural. Musée royal de l’Afrique centrale: Tervuren; 1996.
  • [31]Catani C, Jacob N, Schauer E, Kohila M, Neuner F: Family violence, war, and natural disasters: a study of the effect of extreme stress on childrens’s mental health in Sri Lanka. BMC Psychiatry 2008, 8:33. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [32]National Unity and Reconciliation Commission (NURC): The causes of violence after the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. Kigali: Republic of Rwanda; 2008.
  • [33]Friedman MJ, Marsella AJ: Posttraumatic stress disorder: An overview of the concept. In Ethnocultural aspects of posttraumatic stress disorder. Issues, research, and Clinical Applications. Edited by Marsella AJ, Friedman MJ, Gerrty ET, Scurfiled RM. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association; 1996:105-125.
  • [34]Silove D, Sinnerbrink I, Field A, Manicavasagar V, Steel Z: Anxiety, depression, and PTSD in asylum-seekers: associations with pre-migration trauma and post- migration stressors. British Journal of Psychiatry 1997, 170:351-357.
  • [35]Scholte WF, Olff M, Ventevogel P, De Vries GJ, Jansveld E, Lopes Cardozo B, Gotway Crawford CA: Mental health symptoms following war and repression in Eastern Afghanistan. JAMA 2004, 292:585-593.
  • [36]Hermansson AC, Timpka T, Thyberg M: The mental health of war-wounded refugees: an 8-year follow-up. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 2002, 190(6):374-380.
  • [37]Sabin M, Lopes Cardozo B, Nackerud L, Kaiser R, Varese L: Factors associated with poor mental health among Guatemalan refugees living in Mexico 20 years after civil conflict. JAMA 2003, 290(5):635-642.
  • [38]Marshall GN, Schell TL, Elliott MN, Berthold SM, Chun CA: Mental health of Cambodian refugees two decades after resettlement in the United States. JAMA 2005, 294(5):571-579.
  • [39]Neugebauer R, Fisher PW, Turner JB, Yamabe S, Sarsfield JA, Stehling-Ariza T: Post-traumatic stress reactions among Rwandan children and adolescents in the early aftermath of genocide. International Journal of Epidemiology 2009, 38(4):1033-1045.
  • [40]Sydor G, Phillipot P: Conséquences psychologiques des massacres de 1994 au Rwanda. Santé mentale au Québec 1996, 21(1):229-246.
  • [41]Agaibi CE, Wilson JP: Trauma, PTSD, and resilience: a review of the literature. Trauma, violence & abuse 2005, 6(3):195-216.
  • [42]Kellerman NP: Psychopathology in children of Holocaust survivors: A review of the research literature. Israel Journal of Psychiatry and Related Sciences 2001, 38(1):36-46.
  • [43]Lopes Cardozo B, Kaiser R, Gotway CA, Agani F: Mental health, social functioning, and feelings of hatred and revenge of Kosovar Albanians one year after the war in Kosovo. Journal of Traumatic Stress 2003, 16(4):351-360.
  • [44]Mollica RF, McInnes K, Poole C, Tor S: Dose-effect relationships of trauma to symptoms of depression and post- traumatic stress disorder among Cambodian survivors of mass violence. British Journal of Psychiatry 1999, 173:482-488.
  • [45]Schauer M, Neuner F, Karunakara U, Klaschik C, Robert C, Elbert T: PTSD and the “building block” effect of psychological trauma among West Nile Africans. European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies Bulletin 2003, 10(2):5-6.
  • [46]Schnurr PP, Jankowski MK: Physcial health and posttraumatic stress disorder: review and synthesis. Seminars in Clinical Neuropsychiatry 1999, 4(4):295-304.
  • [47]Engelhard IM, Van den Hout MA, Weerts J, Hox JJ, Van Doornen LJP: A prospectice study of the relation between posttraumatic stress and physical health symptoms. International Journal of Clinical and Health Psychology 2009, 9(3):365-372.
  • [48]Sharp TJ, Harvey AG: Chronic pain and posttraumatic stress disorder: mutual maintenance? Clinical Psychology Review 2001, 21(6):857-877.
  • [49]Liedl A, O'Donnell M, Creamer M, Silove D, McFarlane A, Knaevelsrud C, Bryant RA: Support for the mutual maintenance of pain and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms. Psychological Medicine 2010, 40:1215-1223.
  • [50]Richters A, Dekker C, Scholte WF: Community based sociotherapy in Byumba. Rwanda. Intervention 2008, 6(2):100-116.
  • [51]Andrews B, Brewin CR, Andrews SR: Gender, Social Support, and PTSD in Victims of Violence. Journal of Traumatic Stress 2003, 16(4):421-427.
  • [52]Brounéus K: Truth-telling as talking cure? Insecurity and retraumatization in tneh Rwandan Gacaca courts. Security Dialogue 2008, 39(1):55-76.
  • [53]Programme National de la Santé Mentale (PNSM): Guide en Santé Mentale dans le contexte des Juridictions Gacaca. Kigali: Ministère de la Santé; 2004.
  • [54]Longman T, Rutagengwa T: Memory, identity, and community in Rwanda. In My neighbor, my enemy: Justice and Community in the Aftermath of Mass Atrocity Edited by Stover E, Weinstein HM. 2004, 162-182.
  • [55]Buckley-Zistel S: Remembering to forget: Chosen amnesia as a strategy for local coexistence in post-genocide Rwanda. Africa 2006, 76(2):131-150.
  • [56]Mgabko C: Ingando Solidarity Camps: Reconciliation and Political Indoctrination in post-genocide Rwanda. Harvard Human Rights Journal 2005, 18:201-224.
  • [57]Wielenga C, Harris G: Building peace and security after genocide: the contribution of the gacaca courts of Rwanda. African Security Review 2011, 20(1):15-25.
  • [58]Hatzfeld J: La stratégie des antilopes. Paris: Editions du Seuil; 2007.
  • [59]Drumbl M: Restorative Justice and Collective Responsibility: Lessons for and from the Rwandan Genocide. Contemporary Justice Review 2002, 5(1):5-22.
  • [60]Bar-On D: Holocaust perpetrators and their children: A paradoxical morality. Journal of Humanistic Psychology 1989, 29(4):424-443.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:33次 浏览次数:20次