战斗暴露和创伤周围因素预测在尼日利亚打击叛乱的军事人员创伤后应激障碍

James Abel, Fredrick Sonter Anongo, Binan Evans Dami, Aboh James Ogbole, A. Abel, Z. Dagona
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引用次数: 2

摘要

以往的研究表明,创伤后应激障碍是影响经历过战斗情况的军人的主要心理健康挑战之一。然而,尽管博科圣地暴露率不断上升,但尼日利亚军事环境中PTSD的预测因素研究仍然缺乏。因此,本研究审查了创伤周围因素(战斗暴露、部署次数、部署持续时间和药物使用)对尼日利亚东北部博科-哈拉姆叛乱暴露的尼日利亚军事人员的预测影响。数据收集采用标准化问卷调查715名参与者的样本。使用Pearson相关和层次多元回归对两个假设进行检验,结果显示战斗暴露与健康水平之间存在显著的正相关关系(r= 0.36;P.05)和部署时间(r= .04;p < 0.05)与PTSD无显著关系。其他研究结果表明,战斗暴露(β= 0.32, t= 9.10;P < 0.05)和使用物质应付战斗经验(β= -)。11, t= 3.14;p< 0.05)独立和联合[R= 0.36, F(4,707)= 15.13, p< 0.05]。[05]预测创伤后应激障碍,而持续时间和多次部署的影响在统计学上不显著。研究结果表明,经历过战斗并求助于药物使用来应对的尼日利亚军人患PTSD的风险更高。因此,军事当局应充分重视训练,以限制其人员在紧张遭遇中使用药物应对,以防止创伤后应激障碍的发展。
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Combat Exposure and Peritraumatic Factors Predicting PTSD among Military Personnel Fighting Insurgency in Nigeria
Previous studies indicate that posttraumatic stress disorder is one of the major mental health challenges that affect military personnel who have experienced combat situations. However, there is still paucity of research on the factors that predict PTSD in Nigerian military setting despite increasing rate of Boko-Haram exposure. This study therefore examined the predictive influence of peritraumatic factors (combat exposure, number of deployments, duration of deployments and substance use) among Nigerian military personnel exposed to Boko-Haram insurgency in North-eastern Nigeria. Data were collected using standardized questionnaires on a sample of 715 participants. Two hypotheses were tested using Pearson correlation and hierarchical multiple regression, and results revealed a significant positive relationship between combat exposure (r= .36; p<.05), substance use coping (r= .14; p<.01) and PTSD. However, number (r= .07; p>.05) and duration of deployments (r= .04; p>.05) were found to have no significant relationship with PTSD. Additional findings indicated that combat exposure (β= .32, t= 9.10; p<.05) and using substance to cope with the experience of combat (β= -.11, t= 3.14; p<.05) independently and jointly [R= .36, F(4,707)= 15.13, P<.05] predicted PTSD, while the influence of duration and multiple deployments were statistically insignificant. Findings imply that Nigerian military personnel who experience combat and resort to substance use to cope stand a higher risk of developing PTSD. Thus, Military authority should give adequate attention on training to restrain its personnel from substance use coping during stressful encounters to prevent the development of posttraumatic stress disorder.
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