Trauma, Social Support, and Mental Health Outcomes in a Community Sample of New Zealand Military Veterans.

S. Redwood, F. Alpass, N. Long, N. Pachana, J. Blakey
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

The relationship between social support, mental health, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptomatology was investigated in a sample of 229 former New Zealand military personnel. It was hypothesised that veterans reporting greater satisfaction with their social support networks would also report better mental health and lower levels of PTSD symptomatology, and that social support would buffer the relationship between trauma and PTSD. The number of social supports was expected to be unrelated to both PTSD and mental health. Among the subsample of combat veterans (N = 166), results from multiple regression analyses revealed that satisfaction with social support was significantly related to PTSD severity but unrelated to general mental health. The moderating model of social support on the relationship between trauma and PTSD was not supported in hierarchical regression analysis in the total sample (N = 229). Methodological limitations and other explanations for these results are discussed.
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新西兰退伍军人社区样本的创伤、社会支持和心理健康结果。
对229名新西兰退役军人的社会支持、心理健康和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状之间的关系进行了调查。据推测,报告对社会支持网络满意度更高的退伍军人也会报告更好的心理健康状况和更低水平的创伤后应激障碍症状,并且社会支持可以缓冲创伤和创伤后应激障碍之间的关系。社会支持的数量预计与创伤后应激障碍和心理健康无关。在166名退伍军人中,多元回归分析结果显示,社会支持满意度与PTSD严重程度显著相关,但与一般心理健康状况无关。总样本(N = 229)的层次回归分析不支持社会支持对创伤与PTSD关系的调节模型。对这些结果的方法局限性和其他解释进行了讨论。
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