On poverty and trauma: associations between neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation with post-traumatic stress disorder severity and treatment response
On poverty and trauma: associations between neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation with post-traumatic stress disorder severity and treatment response
Aims: to determine if neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation is associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) severity and psychological treatment response.
Methods: this was a retrospective cohort study based on the analysis of electronic health records for N=2064 patients treated for PTSD across 16 psychological therapy services in England. The Revised Impact of Events Scale (IES-R) scale was used to measure PTSD severity and associations were examined with the neighbourhood-level index of multiple deprivation (IMD) using non-parametric correlations and multilevel modelling.
Results: three times more PTSD cases (33.6% vs. 9.7%) clustered within the most deprived IMD quintile compared to the least deprived quintile. A small and statistically significant correlation between IMD and IES-R baseline severity (r = -0.16, p < .001), indicated that patients living in the most deprived neighbourhoods had more severe symptoms. Post-treatment IES-R severity was also significantly associated with IMD (B = -0.74, p < .001), after controlling for baseline severity of PTSD and comorbid depression symptoms, and adjusting for between-service variability in treatment outcomes (ICC = 0.023). Treatment duration was a moderator of the association between IMD and treatment outcomes.
Conclusions: neighbourhood deprivation is associated with a higher prevalence of PTSD, higher symptom severity at the start of treatment and poorer treatment response. A longer treatment duration mitigated the adverse impact of deprivation on treatment outcomes.
PTSD, Trauma, Poverty, CBT, EMDR
Delgadillo, Jaime
de0cc8fb-10f0-456f-a719-d2b5a884389e
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Delgadillo, Jaime
de0cc8fb-10f0-456f-a719-d2b5a884389e
Richardson, Thomas
f8d84122-b061-4322-a594-5ef2eb5cad0d
Delgadillo, Jaime and Richardson, Thomas
(2025)
On poverty and trauma: associations between neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation with post-traumatic stress disorder severity and treatment response.
European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 16 (1), [2547549].
(doi:10.1080/20008066.2025.2547549).
Abstract
Aims: to determine if neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation is associated with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) severity and psychological treatment response.
Methods: this was a retrospective cohort study based on the analysis of electronic health records for N=2064 patients treated for PTSD across 16 psychological therapy services in England. The Revised Impact of Events Scale (IES-R) scale was used to measure PTSD severity and associations were examined with the neighbourhood-level index of multiple deprivation (IMD) using non-parametric correlations and multilevel modelling.
Results: three times more PTSD cases (33.6% vs. 9.7%) clustered within the most deprived IMD quintile compared to the least deprived quintile. A small and statistically significant correlation between IMD and IES-R baseline severity (r = -0.16, p < .001), indicated that patients living in the most deprived neighbourhoods had more severe symptoms. Post-treatment IES-R severity was also significantly associated with IMD (B = -0.74, p < .001), after controlling for baseline severity of PTSD and comorbid depression symptoms, and adjusting for between-service variability in treatment outcomes (ICC = 0.023). Treatment duration was a moderator of the association between IMD and treatment outcomes.
Conclusions: neighbourhood deprivation is associated with a higher prevalence of PTSD, higher symptom severity at the start of treatment and poorer treatment response. A longer treatment duration mitigated the adverse impact of deprivation on treatment outcomes.
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PTSD_IMD_study_pre-print_2025
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On poverty and trauma associations between neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation post-traumatic stress disorder severity and treatment response (1)
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Accepted/In Press date: 8 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 5 September 2025
Keywords:
PTSD, Trauma, Poverty, CBT, EMDR
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 504999
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504999
ISSN: 2000-8198
PURE UUID: 0a1adf08-a5dd-4323-bc6c-dd828dd86e1b
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Date deposited: 23 Sep 2025 17:08
Last modified: 24 Sep 2025 02:03
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Author:
Jaime Delgadillo
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