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The 2004 tsunami and mental health in Thailand: a longitudinal analysis of one‐and two‐year post‐disaster data
Authors:Wanrudee Isaranuwatchai  Peter C. Coyte  Kwame McKenzie  Samuel Noh
Affiliation:One district completed Wave 1 data collection in June 2006 because of the relocation and retraining of the interviewers.
Abstract:Some 280,000 people died in the Indian Ocean tsunami on 26 December 2004. This cohort study examined its impact on mental health one and two years later. It did so by investigating the association between six consequent variables (personal injury, loss of home, loss of business, death of a family member, injury to a family member, or loss of a family member's business) and mental health, as measured by the 36‐item Short Form Health Survey (SF‐36), among residents in four provinces of Thailand. One year later, participants who suffered a personal injury, the loss of a business, or the loss of a family member reported poorer mental health than those who were unaffected. Two years later, participants who experienced the loss of a family member reported poorer mental health than those who were unaffected. This research shows that such a disaster may have long‐lasting ramifications for mental health, and that diverse losses may influence mental health differently.
Keywords:mental health  natural disaster  Southeast Asia  Thailand  tsunami
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