The University of Southampton
University of Southampton Institutional Repository

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
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
2000-8198
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).

Record type: Article

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.

Text
PTSD_IMD_study_pre-print_2025 - Accepted Manuscript
Download (788kB)
Text
On poverty and trauma associations between neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation post-traumatic stress disorder severity and treatment response (1) - Version of Record
Download (1MB)

More information

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
ORCID for Thomas Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5357-4281

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Sep 2025 17:08
Last modified: 24 Sep 2025 02:03

Export record

Altmetrics

Contributors

Author: Jaime Delgadillo

Download statistics

Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.

View more statistics

Atom RSS 1.0 RSS 2.0

Contact ePrints Soton: eprints@soton.ac.uk

ePrints Soton supports OAI 2.0 with a base URL of http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/cgi/oai2

This repository has been built using EPrints software, developed at the University of Southampton, but available to everyone to use.

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we will assume that you are happy to receive cookies on the University of Southampton website.

×