Skip to main content
. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2017 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Psychol Trauma. 2016 Mar 7;8(5):641–648. doi: 10.1037/tra0000124

Table 1. Nine primary research studies focused on Palestinian adolescents.

Study Setting Sample characteristics Methods Significant results Non-significant results
Al-Krenawi, J. Graham, 2012 Gaza and the West Bank 971 adolescents

42% boys and 57% girls

521 adolescents from the West Bank and 450 from the Gaza strip

Ages 14-18
Cross-sectional

Self-reported

Participants were from randomly selected schools from refugee camps, villages and major cities in both Gaza and the West Bank, through the ministries of education

Outcome: PTSD symptom severity
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: Greater political violence exposure
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO:
INDIVIDUAL: female sex

Protective factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: Higher family economic status
INDIVIDUAL: N/A
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: Parents' education
INDIVIDUAL: Nationality and religion
Dubow et al., 2010 West Bank (64% of the sample) and Gaza Strip 36% of the sample) 600 adolescents

200 8 year olds (101 girls and 99 boys), 200 11 year olds (100 girls and 100 boys) and 200 14 year olds (100 girls and 100 boys)
Longitudinal

Representative sample

Diagnostic interview and self-reported

Outcome: PTSD symptom severity
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: Living in Gaza compared to West Bank; greater political conflict/violence
MEZZO: Greater exposure of school conflict/violence
MICRO: family conflict/violence
INDIVIDUAL: N/A

Protective factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: N/A
INDIVIDUAL: male sex, older age
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: community conflict/violence
MICRO: parent education and income
INDIVIDUAL: no significant interactions between sex or age and ecological level of exposure, or political violence and ecological level of exposure
Elbadour et al. 2007 The Rafah and Kan-Younis Refugee camps in the southern region of the Gaza Strip 229 adolescents

Of the 229 adolescents, 52.8% were boys Ages 15-19
Cross-sectional

Diagnostic interview and self-reported

Randomized sampling using a 2 –stage procedure

Outcome: PTSD diagnosis
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: N/A
INDIVIDUAL: Low levels of seeking guidance and support coping, higher depression and anxiety

Protective factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: N/A
INDIVIDUAL: Positive reappraisal coping
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: N/A
INDIVIDUAL: coping styles of logical analysis, problem solving, cognitive avoidance, acceptance or resignation, and emotional discharge
Khamis, 2005 East Jerusalem and various governorates in the West Bank 1000 adolescents

52.3% were boys and 47.7% were girls

Ages 12-16
Cross-sectional

Diagnostic interview

Stratified random sample in governmental, private and UNRWA schools Questionnaires were administered in an interview format

Outcome: PTSD diagnosis
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: Family ambiance (child's experience of anxiety in the home environment)
INDIVIDUAL: male sex, refugee status, and child employment

Protective factors:
None were reported
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: family economic pressures; harsh discipline
INDIVIDUAL: age, child psychological maltreatment
Khamis, 2008 Gaza Strip and the West Bank from cities (41.3%), villages (17.3% and refugee camps (41.3%). 179 adolescent boys

Ages 12- 18
Cross-sectional

Diagnostic interview and self-reported

Questionnaires were administered in an interview format with adolescents at home

Outcome: PTSD diagnosis
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: N/A
INDIVIDUAL: Fatalism and negative coping

Protective factors:
None were reported
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: geographical location
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: family economic pressures, parents' education, family income; parental support
INDIVIDUAL: age, time since trauma, participating in Intifada, positive coping
Khamis, 2012 Gaza Strip and south Lebanon 600 adolescents

Age 12-16
Cross-sectional

Diagnostic interview

Interview format conducted in the public school system in highly war exposed areas

Outcome: PTSD diagnosis
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: family member injured, home demolished, family economic pressure
INDIVIDUAL: depression and anxiety symptoms

Protective factors: None were reported
GLOBAL:
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: family member killed
INDIVIDUAL: religiosity, ideology
Punamaki et al., 2001 Gaza 86 adolescents

44 girls and 42 boys

Ages 14
Longitudinal

Diagnostic interview and self-reported

Design excluded baseline measures of study outcome

Outcome: PTSD symptom severity
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: higher exposure to traumatic events
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: higher maternal love and caring
INDIVIDUAL: N/A

Protective factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: higher paternal love and caring
INDIVIDUAL: child reporting they would actively respond to violent threat (e.g., confront soldiers)
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: maternal and paternal rejection and hostility
INDIVIDUAL: intelligence, creativity, age, sex, stressful life events
Qouta et al., 2007 Gaza 65 adolescents

52% girls

Ages 17
Longitudinal prospective study

Diagnostic interview

Military trauma exposed adolescents from a community-based random sample of 1,082, which was representative of schools in refugee camps, and urban and resettled areas

Outcome: PTSD symptom severity
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: High exposure to military trauma MICRO: N/A
INDIVIDUAL: Cognitive capacity and neuroticism

Protective factors:
None were reported
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: mother's discipline style
INDIVIDUAL: sex, intelligence; active coping
Thabet et al., 2009 Gaza Strip Participants were 412 children from the Gaza Strip

Ages 12- 16
Cross-sectional

Diagnostic interview and self-reported

Random sample Gaza traumatic events checklist (GTEC), the SCID (DSM-V) and the Perceived Parenting Support Scale (PPSS)

Outcome: PTSD diagnosis
Risk Factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: The number of exposures to traumatic events
MEZZO: receiving social assistance
MICRO: Fathers lower education
INDIVIDUAL: N/A

Protective factors:
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: N/A
MICRO: Perceived parenting support
INDIVIDUAL: N/A
GLOBAL: N/A
MACRO: N/A
MEZZO: geographic region
MICRO: number of rooms in house; number of siblings; family income, mother's education, parental education
INDIVIDUAL: age, sex