Trauma, resilience and significant relationships: Sex differences in protective factors for military mental health.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry Pub Date : 2024-10-11 DOI:10.1177/00048674241286818
Lisa Dell, Kelsey Madden, Jenelle Baur, Alyssa Sbisa, Alexander McFarlane, Miranda VanHooff, Richard Bryant, Ellie Lawrence-Wood
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Abstract

Background: Military service is historically a male-dominated occupation, as such, the majority of research examining the development of mental disorder in Australian Defence Force members has had primarily male samples. While there have been mixed findings internationally regarding sex differences in rates of mental disorder and subthreshold symptoms among military personnel, across studies, the evidence tends to suggest that female military members are at least as likely as males to experience subthreshold mental health symptoms and have similar or higher rates of posttraumatic stress disorder despite the differences in roles during service. What is less understood is the impact of sex differences in symptom emergence over time and in predictors of clinical disorder.

Method: The sample included a longitudinal cohort of Australian Defence Force members (N = 8497) surveyed at Time 1 (2010) and followed up at Time 2 (2015) on measures of anger, self-perceived resilience, trauma exposure, deployment exposure, suicidality, help-seeking, relationship satisfaction and mental health disorder symptoms. Outcomes included Subthreshold Disorder (above the optimal screening cut-off on the 10-item Kessler distress scale or posttraumatic stress disorder checklist) and Probable Disorder (above the epidemiological cut-off on the 10-item Kessler distress scale or posttraumatic stress disorder checklist).

Results: Results found that while lifetime trauma exposure remained the strongest predictor of later probable disorder emergence among both males and females, for females specifically, self-reported resilience was also a significant protective factor. In contrast, being in a significant relationship at Time 1 was a protective factor against the development of subthreshold disorder in males.

Conclusion: For the first time, sex differences in mental health symptom emergence over time have been explored in a large Australian cohort of military members. The capacity to adapt and bounce back after adversity emerged as a proactive factor against poor mental health for females in the military and could be addressed as part of routine skills training. Social support from significant relationship was particularly important for males' mental health, suggesting that maintaining positive relationships and supporting military spouses and partners are critical for males' mental health.

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创伤、复原力和重要关系:军人心理健康保护因素的性别差异。
背景:服兵役历来是男性占主导地位的职业,因此,大多数有关澳大利亚国防军成员精神障碍发展的研究主要以男性为样本。尽管国际上关于军人精神障碍和阈下症状发生率的性别差异的研究结果不一,但在各项研究中,有证据倾向于表明,尽管在服役期间的角色不同,但女性军人至少和男性一样有可能出现阈下精神健康症状,并且有类似或更高的创伤后应激障碍发生率。目前还不太清楚的是,随着时间的推移,性别差异对症状出现的影响以及对临床障碍预测的影响:样本包括澳大利亚国防军成员的纵向队列(N = 8497),在时间 1(2010 年)进行调查,并在时间 2(2015 年)对愤怒、自我感觉复原力、创伤暴露、部署暴露、自杀倾向、求助、人际关系满意度和心理健康障碍症状进行随访。结果包括阈下障碍(高于凯斯勒十项痛苦量表或创伤后应激障碍检查表的最佳筛查临界值)和可能障碍(高于凯斯勒十项痛苦量表或创伤后应激障碍检查表的流行病学临界值):结果发现,在男性和女性中,终生遭受创伤仍然是日后可能出现障碍的最有力预测因素,而对于女性而言,自我报告的复原力也是一个重要的保护因素。与此相反,在时间1时处于重要关系中的男性是阈下障碍发展的保护因素:结论:这是首次在一个大型澳大利亚军人队列中对心理健康症状随时间变化的性别差异进行研究。逆境后的适应能力和反弹能力是防止女性军人心理健康状况不佳的一个积极因素,可作为日常技能培训的一部分加以解决。来自重要关系的社会支持对男性的心理健康尤为重要,这表明保持积极的关系以及支持军人配偶和伴侣对男性的心理健康至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
8.00
自引率
2.20%
发文量
149
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is the official Journal of The Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists (RANZCP). The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is a monthly journal publishing original articles which describe research or report opinions of interest to psychiatrists. These contributions may be presented as original research, reviews, perspectives, commentaries and letters to the editor. The Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry is the leading psychiatry journal of the Asia-Pacific region.
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