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PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST

Thirty one victims of bomb blast in a bus caused by terrorist activity in Dausa district, Rajasthan on 22.5.96, were evaluated for psychological reactions 3 days & 2 weeks after the incident. All hospitalized & non hospitalised bomb blast victims were assessed within 3 days of injury by obje...

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Autores principales: Gautam, Shiv, Gupta, I.D., Batra, Lalit, Sharma, Himanshiu, Khandelwal, Rakesh, Pant, Anshuman
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2964816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494441
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author Gautam, Shiv
Gupta, I.D.
Batra, Lalit
Sharma, Himanshiu
Khandelwal, Rakesh
Pant, Anshuman
author_facet Gautam, Shiv
Gupta, I.D.
Batra, Lalit
Sharma, Himanshiu
Khandelwal, Rakesh
Pant, Anshuman
author_sort Gautam, Shiv
collection PubMed
description Thirty one victims of bomb blast in a bus caused by terrorist activity in Dausa district, Rajasthan on 22.5.96, were evaluated for psychological reactions 3 days & 2 weeks after the incident. All hospitalized & non hospitalised bomb blast victims were assessed within 3 days of injury by objective predictors (percent of burnt area, facial disfigurement, limb amputations, fractures etc.) and subjective predictors (emotional distress and perceived social support). Detailed history, physical and mental state examination of all patients was carried out and for those having scores more then 17 on GHQ-60 (Hindi version), IPIS was administered. Diagnosis was made by 3 senior consultant psychiatrists of Psychiatric Centre, Jaipur, on the basis oflCD-10. At day 3 of 31 patients studied 11 (35.45%) had psychiatric morbidity. Out of which 6 (19.35%) had acute stress reaction, 3 (9.68%) had depression and 2 (6.45%) dissociative amnesia. Most commonly reported symptoms on IPIS were depersonalisation, derealisation, sleep disturbances specially generalised sleep loss, loss of appetite, nightmares, situational anxiety, depression, mental irritability, dulness of feelings, self blame, guilt, loss of interest, suicidal ideas, and worry about money, spouse, work and children. Most common physical injury was burns, followed by hearing disturbances, wounds received due to glass <& metal pieces and non specific pains and aches. Findings of follow up have been discussed and battery of tests for evaluation of victims of acute trauma has been suggested.
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spelling pubmed-29648162011-04-14 PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST Gautam, Shiv Gupta, I.D. Batra, Lalit Sharma, Himanshiu Khandelwal, Rakesh Pant, Anshuman Indian J Psychiatry Original Article Thirty one victims of bomb blast in a bus caused by terrorist activity in Dausa district, Rajasthan on 22.5.96, were evaluated for psychological reactions 3 days & 2 weeks after the incident. All hospitalized & non hospitalised bomb blast victims were assessed within 3 days of injury by objective predictors (percent of burnt area, facial disfigurement, limb amputations, fractures etc.) and subjective predictors (emotional distress and perceived social support). Detailed history, physical and mental state examination of all patients was carried out and for those having scores more then 17 on GHQ-60 (Hindi version), IPIS was administered. Diagnosis was made by 3 senior consultant psychiatrists of Psychiatric Centre, Jaipur, on the basis oflCD-10. At day 3 of 31 patients studied 11 (35.45%) had psychiatric morbidity. Out of which 6 (19.35%) had acute stress reaction, 3 (9.68%) had depression and 2 (6.45%) dissociative amnesia. Most commonly reported symptoms on IPIS were depersonalisation, derealisation, sleep disturbances specially generalised sleep loss, loss of appetite, nightmares, situational anxiety, depression, mental irritability, dulness of feelings, self blame, guilt, loss of interest, suicidal ideas, and worry about money, spouse, work and children. Most common physical injury was burns, followed by hearing disturbances, wounds received due to glass <& metal pieces and non specific pains and aches. Findings of follow up have been discussed and battery of tests for evaluation of victims of acute trauma has been suggested. Medknow Publications 1998 /pmc/articles/PMC2964816/ /pubmed/21494441 Text en Copyright: © Indian Journal of Psychiatry http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Gautam, Shiv
Gupta, I.D.
Batra, Lalit
Sharma, Himanshiu
Khandelwal, Rakesh
Pant, Anshuman
PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST
title PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST
title_full PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST
title_fullStr PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST
title_full_unstemmed PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST
title_short PSYCHIATRIC MORBIDITY AMONG VICTIMS OF BOMB BLAST
title_sort psychiatric morbidity among victims of bomb blast
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2964816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21494441
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