Zara Page, A.Kaplan, H.Erdogan, N.Guler, F.2024-07-182024-07-1820091092-6771https://doi.org/10.1080/10926770902835881https://hdl.handle.net/11411/6337This study investigated posttraumatic stress and depression reactions among survivors of the Istanbul November 2003 terrorist bombings that destroyed synagogues, an HSBC bank, and the British General Consulate. One hundred and forty-nine survivors completed a questionnaire measuring exposure, current posttraumatic stress, and depression responses 6 months after the blasts. This study showed that the prevalence rate of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among survivors was 35.6% and the rate of depression was 23.5%. PTSD was strongly predicted by perceived life threat, whereas depression was strongly predicted by death of a close friend. Overall, female survivors were found to be more vulnerable to developing posttraumatic stress as well as depression after the terrorist bombings.eninfo:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessBomb ExplosionCommunity DisasterDepressionPosttraumatic Stress DisorderTerrorismTerrorist BombingAdultArticleBeck Depression InventoryData AnalysisDepressionDisasterDisease AssociationFemaleHumanMajor Clinical StudyMaleMental HealthOutcome AssessmentPosttraumatic Stress DisorderPrevalenceRating ScaleRisk FactorSelf ReportStructured QuestionnaireSurvivorTerrorismTurkey (Republic)Posttraumatic stress and depression reactions among survivors of the istanbul november 2003 terrorist attacksArticle2-s2.0-7044963021910.1080/109267709028358812923Q128018