Taft Casey T, Schumm Jeremiah A, Panuzio Jillian, Proctor Susan P
National Center for PTSD, Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System, and Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02130, USA.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2008 Aug;76(4):648-56. doi: 10.1037/a0012576.
This study examined interrelationships among combat exposure, symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and family adjustment in a sample of male and female Operation Desert Storm veterans (N = 1,512). In structural equation models for both male and female veterans, higher combat exposure was associated with higher PTSD symptoms, which in turn were associated with poorer family adjustment, although these indirect effects did not reach statistical significance. The model for female veterans evidenced a significant direct negative association between combat exposure and family adjustment when it statistically accounted for PTSD symptoms. When the relative impacts of separate PTSD symptom groupings were examined, those reflecting withdrawal/numbing symptoms and arousal/lack of control symptoms significantly and indirectly accounted for the negative effects of combat exposure on family adjustment. Study findings indicate a number of possible pathways through which war-zone deployments negatively impact military families and suggest several avenues for future research.
本研究在沙漠风暴行动退伍军人样本(N = 1512)中,考察了战斗暴露、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状与家庭适应之间的相互关系,样本包括男性和女性退伍军人。在男性和女性退伍军人的结构方程模型中,较高的战斗暴露与较高的PTSD症状相关,而PTSD症状又与较差的家庭适应相关,尽管这些间接影响未达到统计学显著性。当在统计上考虑PTSD症状时,女性退伍军人的模型显示战斗暴露与家庭适应之间存在显著的直接负相关。当考察单独的PTSD症状分组的相对影响时,那些反映退缩/麻木症状和觉醒/缺乏控制症状的分组显著且间接地解释了战斗暴露对家庭适应的负面影响。研究结果表明了战区部署对军人家庭产生负面影响的一些可能途径,并为未来研究提出了几条途径。