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Published in: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health 4/2011

01-08-2011 | Brief Communication

Patients from Abroad Becoming Patients in Everyday Practice: Torture Survivors in Primary Care

Authors: Jennifer M. Tamblyn, Aaron J. Calderon, Sarah Combs, Maureen M. O’Brien

Published in: Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health | Issue 4/2011

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Abstract

Since 1975, over 3.5 million refugees have resettled in the United States, many of whom have experienced some form of torture, and little data exists on their primary care needs. This is retrospective chart-review of sixty-one torture survivors in Denver, Colorado. The patients were predominantly from Africa, 88% experienced physical torture, 21% sexual torture. Medical conditions included: major depression (45%), PTSD (48%), anxiety (31%), insomnia (50%), hypertension (29%), dyslipidemia (6%), HIV (6%) and tuberculosis class 2–4 (32%). Physical torture increased rates of PTSD (OR 7.29; CI 1.81, 29.45) and insomnia (OR 5.08; CI 1.41, 18.34). Sexual torture increased rates of major depression (OR 5.44; CI 1.29, 22.99), PTSD (OR 8.24; CI 1.61, 42.18), and insomnia (OR 6.84; CI 1.34, 34.90). Somatic complaints were more frequent in those who had experienced sexual torture (P = 0.041). Torture survivors have complex primary care needs, requiring multidisciplinary treatment.
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Metadata
Title
Patients from Abroad Becoming Patients in Everyday Practice: Torture Survivors in Primary Care
Authors
Jennifer M. Tamblyn
Aaron J. Calderon
Sarah Combs
Maureen M. O’Brien
Publication date
01-08-2011
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health / Issue 4/2011
Print ISSN: 1557-1912
Electronic ISSN: 1557-1920
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10903-010-9429-2

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