U.S. Army Medical Research Unit-Europe, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Heidelberg, Germany.
J Clin Psychol. 2012 Jul;68(7):782-800. doi: 10.1002/jclp.21864. Epub 2012 May 9.
The study examined whether elevated rates of externalizing behaviors following deployment could be explained by internalizing symptoms (depression, anxiety, and PTSD symptoms), and health of the social environment (unit leadership, organizational support, and stigma/barriers to care).
A model of combat exposure, social environment, internalizing symptoms, and externalizing behaviors was tested in a military unit following a fifteen-month deployment to Iraq. The sample included 1,397 soldiers assessed four month post-deployment; 589 of these soldiers were assessed again nine months post-deployment.
Externalizing behaviors were highly stable over the five-month post-deployment period. Both social environment and internalizing symptoms were significantly associated with level of externalizing behaviors at four months and nine months post-deployment, but combat exposure alone significantly predicted change in externalizing behaviors over the follow-up period.
Results suggest the need to broaden the scope of interventions targeted to combat veterans and have implications for care providers and military leaders.
本研究旨在探讨 Deployment 后外化行为率升高是否可以用内化症状(抑郁、焦虑和 PTSD 症状)和社会环境健康(单位领导、组织支持和耻辱/护理障碍)来解释。
在一个军事单位进行了一项战斗暴露、社会环境、内化症状和外化行为模型的测试,该单位在部署到伊拉克 15 个月后进行了评估。该样本包括 1397 名士兵,在 Deployment 后四个月进行了评估;其中 589 名士兵在九个月后再次进行了评估。
外化行为在五个月的 Deployment 后期间高度稳定。社会环境和内化症状都与四个月和九个月后外化行为的水平显著相关,但只有战斗暴露单独显著预测了随访期间外化行为的变化。
结果表明,有必要扩大针对战斗退伍军人的干预范围,并对护理提供者和军事领导人产生影响。