%0 Journal Article %T Loss of loved ones or home due to a disaster: Effects over time on distress in immigrant ethnic minorities %A Annelieke N. Drogendijk %A Geert E. Smid %A Jeroen Knipscheer %A Paul A. Boelen %A Rolf J. Kleber %J Transcultural Psychiatry %@ 1461-7471 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/1363461518784355 %X Exposure to mass trauma may bring about increased sensitivity to new or ongoing stressors. It is unclear whether sensitivity to stress associated with ethnic minority/immigrant status may be affected by severe exposure to mass trauma. We examined whether the loss of loved ones or home due to a disaster is associated with more persistent disaster-related distress in ethnic minorities compared with Dutch natives in the Netherlands. In residents affected by a fireworks disaster (N£¿=£¿1029), we assessed disaster-related distress after 3 weeks, 18 months, and 4 years. The effects of loss of loved ones or home and ethnic minority/immigrant status on distress were analyzed using latent growth modeling. After controlling for age, gender, education, employment, and post-disaster stressful life events, the loss of loved ones was associated with more persistent disaster-related distress in ethnic minorities compared with natives at 18 months, and the loss of home was associated with more persistent disaster-related distress in ethnic minorities compared with natives between 18 months and 4 years. Our results suggest that the loss of loved ones may increase sensitivity to stress associated with ethnic minority/immigrant status during the early phase of adaptation to a disaster. Loss of home may lead to further resource loss and thereby increase sensitivity to stress associated with ethnic minority/immigrant status in the long term. Efforts to prevent stress-related psychopathology following mass trauma should specifically target ethnic minority groups, notably refugees and asylum seekers, who often experienced multiple losses of loved ones as well as their homes %K stress sensitivity %K traumatic loss %K posttraumatic stress disorder %K disasters %K ethnic minority status %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1363461518784355