What is post-traumatic stress disorder?

JOHANNESBURG – Post-traumatic stress disorder is becoming more common, but recovery is possible.

 

It is not surprising that in South Africa where crime and violent events such as sexual assault, hijacking and domestic violence are common, there is also a high prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PSTD).

Dr Eileen Thomas, a psychiatrist affiliated to Akeso Psychiatric Clinic in Milnerton, Cape Town, as well as the Stellenbosch University’s Department of Psychiatry and Tygerberg Hospital said that PTSD is not only a common disorder, but is disabling and associated with a large number of adverse and negative effects.

According to Thomas, epidemiological research has documented lifetime prevalence estimates of four to six percent in both civilian and combat cohorts.

She explained that PTSD is a unique psychiatric disorder in that it requires a preceding significant traumatic event as a prerequisite for the disorder to manifest. “According to diagnostic nomenclature, the traumatic event must involve exposure to actual or threatened death, serious injury or sexual violence in one or more ways, including directly witnessing the event or witnessing it happen to someone else or hearing about it and more. Thus, events such as retrenchment, divorce or death of a loved one are not necessarily traumatic events that would qualify to precipitate the disorder,” said Thomas.

General information about PTSD:

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