Gh statistical power, whether and how changes in the levels of PTSD symptom clusters of intrusion, avoidance and hyperarousal are associated with changes in SQOL. We also assessed the direction of possible associations, i.e. whether symptom improvement leads to better SQOL or if improved SQOL results in symptom reduction. Associations between PTSD symptoms and SQOL were separately investigated in two samples: a representative sample of people who still lived in the post-conflict areas in five Balkan countries and a non-representative sample of refugees in three Western European countries. The direction of associations between PTSD symptom clusters and SQOL was explored by pooling data from the two groups in a common dataset and conducting a cross-lagged panel analysis of the reciprocal associations between PTSD symptom clusters and SQOL.The following inclusion criteria were applied: a) being born MedChemExpress 58-49-1 within the territory of former Yugoslavia; b) being between 18 and 65 years of age; c) having experienced at least one war-related potentially traumatic event and d) not having severe learning difficulty or mental impairment due to brain injury or other organic causes. Participants were excluded if they had experienced the last war-related event before 16 years of age. Six hundred and sixty-five Balkan residents and 283 refugees met the criteria for PTSD on the MINI instrument at baseline. Out of these we attempted to follow up 620 Balkan residents (in Bosnia and Herzegovina the number of participants with baseline PTSD was too large to follow up all of them and 150 were randomly selected for re-interviews) and all of the refugees. Numbers of eligible participants, those who were attempted to follow up, lost to follow up and interviewed in each country are reported in Table 1.Procedures and MeasuresSocio-demographic characteristics of participants including their age, sex, marital status, educational level, and current employment status were obtained using a brief structured questionnaire. Mental disorders were assessed on the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), a structured and validated diagnostic interview [20]. The symptom criteria in this instrument are assessed corresponding to the diagnosis Axis 1 of the DSM V [12]. The instrument has been used previously in war-affected and refugee groups [21?2]. The level of post-traumatic stress symptoms was measured on the Impact of Events Scale-Revised (IES-R) [23]. This self-report instrument assesses 22 intrusion, avoidance and hyperarousal symptoms within the last 7 days with regard to a specific traumatic event. Each IES-R item is rated on a Iloprost site five-point scale of distress (0?4). Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life (MANSA) was used to assess subjective quality of life [24]. The MANSA contains 12 items on satisfaction with life in general and with various life domains (employment, financial situation, friendships, leisure activities, accommodation, personal safety, living situation, sex life, relationships with family, physical health, mental health) which are rated on a scale from 1, could not be worse, to 7, could not be better. The MANSA has shown good psychometric properties: Cronbach’s alpha for MANSA items scores was 0.74 and MANSA mean score had a strong correlation with another established instrument for SQOL measurement, the Lancashire Quality of Life Profile, which has a much higher number of items [24]. The mean score of the MANSA was taken as a measure of SQO.Gh statistical power, whether and how changes in the levels of PTSD symptom clusters of intrusion, avoidance and hyperarousal are associated with changes in SQOL. We also assessed the direction of possible associations, i.e. whether symptom improvement leads to better SQOL or if improved SQOL results in symptom reduction. Associations between PTSD symptoms and SQOL were separately investigated in two samples: a representative sample of people who still lived in the post-conflict areas in five Balkan countries and a non-representative sample of refugees in three Western European countries. The direction of associations between PTSD symptom clusters and SQOL was explored by pooling data from the two groups in a common dataset and conducting a cross-lagged panel analysis of the reciprocal associations between PTSD symptom clusters and SQOL.The following inclusion criteria were applied: a) being born within the territory of former Yugoslavia; b) being between 18 and 65 years of age; c) having experienced at least one war-related potentially traumatic event and d) not having severe learning difficulty or mental impairment due to brain injury or other organic causes. Participants were excluded if they had experienced the last war-related event before 16 years of age. Six hundred and sixty-five Balkan residents and 283 refugees met the criteria for PTSD on the MINI instrument at baseline. Out of these we attempted to follow up 620 Balkan residents (in Bosnia and Herzegovina the number of participants with baseline PTSD was too large to follow up all of them and 150 were randomly selected for re-interviews) and all of the refugees. Numbers of eligible participants, those who were attempted to follow up, lost to follow up and interviewed in each country are reported in Table 1.Procedures and MeasuresSocio-demographic characteristics of participants including their age, sex, marital status, educational level, and current employment status were obtained using a brief structured questionnaire. Mental disorders were assessed on the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI), a structured and validated diagnostic interview [20]. The symptom criteria in this instrument are assessed corresponding to the diagnosis Axis 1 of the DSM V [12]. The instrument has been used previously in war-affected and refugee groups [21?2]. The level of post-traumatic stress symptoms was measured on the Impact of Events Scale-Revised (IES-R) [23]. This self-report instrument assesses 22 intrusion, avoidance and hyperarousal symptoms within the last 7 days with regard to a specific traumatic event. Each IES-R item is rated on a five-point scale of distress (0?4). Manchester Short Assessment of Quality of Life (MANSA) was used to assess subjective quality of life [24]. The MANSA contains 12 items on satisfaction with life in general and with various life domains (employment, financial situation, friendships, leisure activities, accommodation, personal safety, living situation, sex life, relationships with family, physical health, mental health) which are rated on a scale from 1, could not be worse, to 7, could not be better. The MANSA has shown good psychometric properties: Cronbach’s alpha for MANSA items scores was 0.74 and MANSA mean score had a strong correlation with another established instrument for SQOL measurement, the Lancashire Quality of Life Profile, which has a much higher number of items [24]. The mean score of the MANSA was taken as a measure of SQO.