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Published in: BMC Psychiatry 1/2022

Open Access 01-12-2022 | Adjustment Disorder | Research

PTSD is not the emblematic disorder of the COVID-19 pandemic; adjustment disorder is

Authors: Alain Brunet, Marjolaine Rivest-Beauregard, Michelle Lonergan, Sabrina Cipolletta, Andrew Rasmussen, Xiangfei Meng, Nematollah Jaafari, Sara Romero, Julia Superka, Adam D. Brown, Ram P. Sapkota

Published in: BMC Psychiatry | Issue 1/2022

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Abstract

Background

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been hailed by some as the emblematic mental disorder of the COVID-19 pandemic, assuming that PTSD’s life-threat criterion was met de facto. More plausible outcomes like adjustment disorder (AD) have been overlooked.

Methods

An online cross-sectional survey was launched in the initial stage of the pandemic using a convenience sample of 5 913 adults to compare the prevalence of COVID-related probable PTSD versus probable AD. The abridged Impact of Event Scale – Revised (IES-6) assessed the severity of trauma- and stressor-related symptoms over the previous week. Demographic and pandemic-related data (e.g., receiving a formal diagnosis of COVID-19, job loss, loss of loved one, confinement, material hardship) were collected. A Classification and Regression Tree analysis was conducted to uncover the pandemic experiences leading to clinical ‘caseness’. Caseness was defined by a score > 9 on the IES-6 symptom measure and further characterized as PTSD or AD depending on whether the Peritraumatic Distress Inventory’s life-threat item was endorsed or not.

Results

The participants were predominantly Caucasian (72.8%), women (79.2%), with a university degree (85%), and a mean age of 42.22 (SD = 15.24) years; 3 647 participants (61.7%; 95%CI [60.4, 63.0]) met the threshold for caseness. However, when perceived life-threat was accounted for, only 6.7% (95%CI [6.1, 7.4]) were classified as PTSD cases, and 55% (95%CI [53.7, 56.2]) as AD cases. Among the AD cases, three distinct profiles emerged marked by the following: (i) a worst personal pandemic experience eliciting intense fear, helplessness or horror (in the absence, however, of any life-threat), (ii) a pandemic experience eliciting sadness/grief, and (iii) worrying intensely about the safety of significant others.

Conclusions

Studies considering the life-threat criterion as met de facto during the pandemic are confusing PTSD for AD on most counts. This misconception is obscuring the various AD-related idioms of distress that have emerged during the pandemic and the actual treatment needs.
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Metadata
Title
PTSD is not the emblematic disorder of the COVID-19 pandemic; adjustment disorder is
Authors
Alain Brunet
Marjolaine Rivest-Beauregard
Michelle Lonergan
Sabrina Cipolletta
Andrew Rasmussen
Xiangfei Meng
Nematollah Jaafari
Sara Romero
Julia Superka
Adam D. Brown
Ram P. Sapkota
Publication date
01-12-2022
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Psychiatry / Issue 1/2022
Electronic ISSN: 1471-244X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-022-03903-5

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