Sakat Efrat, Schiff Miriam
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Israel.
J Interpers Violence. 2021 Apr;36(7-8):NP3914-NP3937. doi: 10.1177/0886260518780775. Epub 2018 Jun 21.
This study examined the potential moderating effects of religiosity on the associations between exposure to acts of political violence and posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTS) among Jewish adolescents in Israel. In addition, it examined whether self-reported physical and interpersonal exposure to acts of political violence predicts PTS symptoms beyond the objective exposure effects (i.e., the proximity of participants' place of residence to high-, moderate-, or low-intensity political violence). A representative sample of 2,992 Jewish high school students (Grades 10 and 11) was taken. We used self-reporting to measure the level of religiosity and the Impact of Events Scale-Revised (IES-R) to measure PTS symptoms. Results show that self-reported exposure to acts of political violence adds a significant additional amount of variance to the prediction of PTS symptoms after objective exposure is already included in the regression equation. Religiosity was found as a factor for PTS symptoms such that the greater the religiosity of the adolescents, the higher their PTS symptoms. Therefore, prevention interventions should target the vulnerable group of religious Jewish adolescents.
本研究考察了宗教信仰对以色列犹太青少年接触政治暴力行为与创伤后应激症状(PTS)之间关联的潜在调节作用。此外,研究还探讨了自我报告的身体和人际层面接触政治暴力行为,在客观接触影响(即参与者居住地与高、中、低强度政治暴力的距离)之外,是否能预测PTS症状。研究选取了2992名犹太高中生(10年级和11年级)作为代表性样本。我们使用自我报告来衡量宗教信仰程度,并使用事件影响量表修订版(IES-R)来测量PTS症状。结果表明,在回归方程中已经纳入客观接触因素后,自我报告的接触政治暴力行为在预测PTS症状方面又显著增加了额外的方差量。研究发现宗教信仰是PTS症状的一个因素,即青少年的宗教信仰程度越高,其PTS症状越严重。因此,预防干预措施应针对宗教犹太青少年这一弱势群体。