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25th European Congress of Psychiatry / European Psychiatry 41S (2017) S710–S771
S723
Introduction
In a globalized world, violence, present in all forms
and everywhere, it is a serious public health problem. Violence and
war lead to death and leave marks on the bodies and minds, and
the post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a mental disorder that
may develop following exposure to a potential event traumatic.
Results
In the 3-month period (January 2016 to April 2016),
according to typological analysis of the journal cover, the following
results were found: the type of prevailing violence was interper-
sonal, community, committed by a stranger (75%), followed by the
violence of the economic type (16.7%), and finally interpersonal
violence committed by partner (8.3%). Although not all cases have
provided the number of people who perpetrated or suffered vio-
lence, most victims of violence were male (8), aged 3 months and
36 years, followed by 2 women, and as a perpetrator of violence the
men were in excess (4 men) followed by one woman.
Discussion
Violence and war are traumatic stressors and risk fac-
tors for PTSD which, in turn, is also a risk factor to perpetrate
violence, such as domestic violence. The costs of violence are high
and its routinization as a way of life has important effects on the
mental health of population.
Considerations
Scientific research, including qualitative studies,
on PTSD, violence and war are necessary so that we have a better
understanding of the phenomenon aswell as to promote themental
health of all through early intervention or even in preventing the
onset of this disorder.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1309EV0980
Deaths and symbolic use of language:
Semiotics and thanatological reading
of the film Nell
S. Färber
1 ,∗
, M .Färber
21
VIVER Psicologia e Tanatologia, Tanatologia, Cascavel, Brazil
2
VIVER Psicologia e Tanatologia, Psicologia, Cascavel, Brazil
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Psychiatric disorders may become more severe
when the subject is exposed to a hostile environment. Symptoms of
mental malaise are expressed by the senses, including speech and
language.
Methods
The method is used of semiotic analysis and thanato-
logical movie.
Objective
To investigate the limit and death as a trigger of a sin-
gular mode of use of the spoken language. The problem presented
in this paper is the linguistic system created by Nell.
Results
Partial results show that spoken language in this par-
ticular cut, becomes an instrument for dealing with the losses
accumulated throughout his life. The life of isolation, restrictions
on maternal vocalization, her mother’s death and mourning acted
as an inhibitor of language.
Conclusion
The spoken language works like kaleidoscope of
interactions of the individual with their group, with the medium in
which it is inserted, with the set of beliefs that nourishes and with
the world that she wants there, even if only in your intimate venue.
Thus, demonstrating the sociolinguistic approach inalienable role
in speech performance.
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1310EV0981
Pieces of me: A story of trauma and
dissociation
L. Garcia Ayala
1 ,∗
, M. Gómez Revuelta
2, C. Martin Requena
2,
M. Juncal Ruiz
3, O. Porta Olivares
3,
E. Saez de Adana García de Acilu
2 , A.Aranzabal Itoiz
2 ,B. González Hernández
2 , M.Laborde Zufiaurre
2 ,M. Zubia Martín
2 , N.Nú˜nez Morales
2 , M.P. López Pe˜na
2 ,A.M. González-Pinto Arrillaga
21
Osakidetza, Psychiatry, Salvatierra-Agurain, Spain
2
Osakidetza, Psychiatry, Vitoria, Spain
3
Marqués de Valdecilla, Psychiatry, Santander, Spain
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Traumatic event related disorders (ASD, PTSD and
dissociative disorders) could share a common dissociative psy-
chobiological origin. Patients diagnosed with dissociative identity
disorder present a high sexual abuse rate (85–90%), way above the
rest of the traumatic spectrum disorders.
Objectives
The goal of this study is to analyse the existing relation
between different types of trauma, especially sexual abuse, and the
onset and continuity of dissociative disorders.
Materials and methods
We report the case of a 37 years old
woman with a long sexual abuse history. The symptoms appear
by age 30, in the form of flashbacks, ushering a persistent identity
fragmentation in individual differentiated opposed components,
shaping a dissociative personality disorder, which was present for
years taking a fluctuating and invalidating nature.
Discussion
When a traumatic event occurs, acute dissociative
reactions frequently appear, usually briefly, disappearing sponta-
neously afterwards. In this case, we can discern the persistence of
the dissociative symptoms and the repercussion they had in the
patient’s functionality.
Conclusion
The existence of a correlation between the duration
of a chronic traumatic event and the persistence of dissociative
symptoms in the evolution of a dissociative personality disorder
is possible.
Keywords
Dissociation; Trauma; Abuse; PTSD
Disclosure of interest
The authors have not supplied their decla-
ration of competing interest.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.eurpsy.2017.01.1311EV0982
Prevalence study of mental disorders
in Georgian military personnel
participating in peace-keeping
missions
S. Giorgi
∗
, T. Oniani , G. Nino , K. Giorgi , L. Estate
Ministry of Defence of Georgia, Psychological Recruitment and
Monitoring Department, Tbilisi, Georgia
∗
Corresponding author.
Introduction
Due to the professional activities acute stress disor-
der and PTSD are most diffuse disorders among military servants.
Number of studies revealed relationships between post-traumatic
stress and depression, anxiety or somatic complaints.
Objective
Though Georgian military personnel actively take part
in the international peacekeeping missions since 2004 and no
research was conducted to investigate the prevalence of above-
mentioned disorders.
Aims
Thus, this study aims to investigate the prevalence of PTSD,
depression, anxiety and somatic complaints in the cohort of Geor-
gian military servants.
Method
The research participants were 2799 military service-
men who had been deployed on the 6 month long period to the
peace-keeping missions and were screened for psychological prob-
lems after deployment. All of them were Caucasian males, with
average age of 29.3 years. All participants were asked to complete
a PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL-5), as well as a 15-item somatic
subscale of the Patient History Questionnaire (PHQ-15), a 9-item
depression subscale of the Patient History Questionnaire (PHQ-
9), a 7-item anxiety subscale of the Patient History Questionnaire
(GAD-7).