Department of Psychology.
J Consult Clin Psychol. 2010 Aug;78(4):551-560. doi: 10.1037/a0018317.
In this study, we examined the influence of pre-disaster perceived social support on post-disaster psychological distress among survivors of Hurricane Katrina.
Participants (N = 386) were low-income mothers between 18 and 34 years of age at baseline (M = 26.4, SD = 4.43). The majority (84.8%) was African American; 10.4% identified as Caucasian, 3.2% identified as Hispanic, and 1.8% identified as other. Participants were enrolled in an educational intervention study in 2004 and 2005. Those who had completed a 1-year follow-up assessment prior to Hurricane Katrina were reassessed approximately 1 year after the hurricane. Measures of perceived social support and psychological distress were included in pre- and post-disaster assessments. Using structural equation modeling and multiple mediator analysis, we tested a model wherein pre-disaster perceived social support predicted post-disaster psychological distress both directly and indirectly through its effects on pre-disaster psychological distress, exposure to hurricane-related stressors, and post-disaster perceived social support. We predicted that higher pre-disaster perceived social support would be predictive of lower pre-disaster psychological distress, lower hurricane-related stressors, and higher post-disaster perceived social support, and that these variables would, in turn, predict lower post-disaster psychologically distress.
Our analyses provide partial support for the hypothesized model. Although pre-disaster perceived social support did not exert a direct effect on post-disaster psychological distress, the indirect effects of all 3 proposed mediators were significant.
Pre-disaster social support can decrease both exposure to natural disasters and the negative psychological effects of natural disaster exposure. These findings underscore the importance of bolstering the post-disaster social support networks of low-income mothers.
本研究旨在探讨灾难前感知到的社会支持对卡特里娜飓风幸存者灾后心理困扰的影响。
参与者(N=386)为基线时年龄在 18 至 34 岁之间的低收入母亲(M=26.4,SD=4.43)。大多数参与者(84.8%)为非裔美国人;10.4%为白种人,3.2%为西班牙裔,1.8%为其他族裔。参与者于 2004 年和 2005 年参加了一项教育干预研究。在卡特里娜飓风之前完成了为期一年的随访评估的参与者,在飓风后大约一年接受了重新评估。在灾难前和灾难后评估中,包括感知社会支持和心理困扰的措施。我们使用结构方程模型和多重中介分析,检验了一个模型,其中灾难前感知社会支持通过其对灾难前心理困扰、飓风相关压力源的暴露以及灾难后感知社会支持的影响,直接和间接预测灾难后心理困扰。我们预测,较高的灾难前感知社会支持将预测较低的灾难前心理困扰、较低的飓风相关压力源和较高的灾难后感知社会支持,而这些变量反过来将预测较低的灾难后心理困扰。
我们的分析为假设模型提供了部分支持。尽管灾难前感知社会支持对灾后心理困扰没有直接影响,但所有 3 个拟议中介变量的间接影响均具有统计学意义。
灾难前的社会支持可以减少自然灾害的暴露和自然灾害暴露的负面心理影响。这些发现强调了加强低收入母亲灾后社会支持网络的重要性。