Medicinski pregled
Volume 61, Issue 1-2, 2008, Pages 11-15

Post-traumatic stress disorder and coping strategies in psychotraumatized refugees (Article)

Cavić T.* , Lecić-Tosevski D. , Pejović M.
  • a Institut za neuropsihijatrijske bolesti "Dr Laza Lazarević", Beograd.
  • b Institut za neuropsihijatrijske bolesti "Dr Laza Lazarević", Beograd.
  • c Institut za neuropsihijatrijske bolesti "Dr Laza Lazarević", Beograd.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: In extreme life events basic assumptions are frequently reassessed and changed. Therefore, trauma requires re-education. Effective coping strategies enable individual to tolerate, minimize, accept or ignore what one cannot manage and to moderate the consequences of stressful, traumatic events. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The aim of this study was to evaluate coping strategies in refugees with post-traumatic stress disorder prior and after group cognitive-behavioural therapy. The sample included 70 refugees who experienced multiple stressors such as organized violence, ethnic conflicts, bombing, expelling from their homes and life in exile. Impact Event Scales-Revised, Ways of Coping-Revised, Scale of Cognitive Self-regulation and Scale of Coping Strategies were administered before and after six months of group cognitive-behavioural therapy. RESULTS: Post-traumatic stress disorder in refugees after therapy significantly decreased. Cognitive self-regulation was improved by moving locus of control from external to internal resources. Coping was qualitatively different, with a wider repertoire of adaptive strategies. DISCUSSION: Cognitive group work facilitates processes of grieving, working-through of traumatic material, increasing emotional awareness and developing creativity in coping. CONCLUSION: Our findings highlight the positive impact of cognitive-behavioural treatment on post-traumatic stress disorder and post-traumatic adjustment.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

male Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic war female Aged Adaptation, Psychological Humans adaptive behavior refugee Yugoslavia psychological aspect Article middle aged human adult Refugees Adolescent posttraumatic stress disorder

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-53449085180&doi=10.2298%2fMPNS0802011C&partnerID=40&md5=ba06e847b5cd73983c2f24f808e56ce8

DOI: 10.2298/MPNS0802011C
ISSN: 00258105
Cited by: 1
Original Language: Croatian