Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University.
Department of Psychiatry, University of South Carolina.
Psychol Trauma. 2022 Oct;14(7):1142-1148. doi: 10.1037/tra0000553. Epub 2020 Mar 5.
We investigate if posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms mediate the effects of disaster severity or prior trauma on binge drinking following disaster exposure and test if support from caregiver moderates the relation between disaster severity and PTSD symptoms as well as prior trauma and PTSD symptoms.
A population-based clinical trial used address-based sampling to enroll 1,804 adolescents and parents from communities affected by tornadoes in Missouri and Alabama. Data collection via baseline (averaging 8 months postdisaster), 4-month postbaseline, and 12-month postbaseline semistructured telephone interviews was completed between September 2011 and August 2013. Longitudinal analyses, testing the indirect effects of disaster severity and prior traumatic events on alcohol use through PTSD symptoms, as potentially moderated by support from caregiver, were conducted.
PTSD symptoms mediated the effect of prior trauma, but not disaster severity, on binge drinking. Specifically, those with more prior traumas reported more PTSD symptoms, which in turn increased risk for binge drinking. Support from caregiver moderated the effect of disaster severity, but not prior trauma, on PTSD symptoms. Specifically, the effect of disaster severity on PTSD symptoms was significant for adolescents with average or below-average caregiver support.
Findings suggest that PTSD symptomatology is one mechanism by which prior trauma can impact binge drinking among adolescents following exposure to a natural disaster. Caregiver support can serve as a buffer for reducing PTSD symptomatology related to the severity of a natural disaster, which can decrease the likelihood of adolescent binge drinking. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
我们研究创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状是否在灾难严重程度或先前创伤后对暴露于灾难后的 binge drinking 起到中介作用,并检验照顾者的支持是否调节了灾难严重程度与 PTSD 症状以及先前创伤与 PTSD 症状之间的关系。
一项基于人群的临床试验使用基于地址的抽样方法,从密苏里州和阿拉巴马州受龙卷风影响的社区中招募了 1804 名青少年及其父母。数据通过基线(平均在灾难发生后 8 个月)、4 个月和 12 个月的半结构化电话访谈收集,时间在 2011 年 9 月至 2013 年 8 月之间。进行了纵向分析,通过 PTSD 症状检验了灾难严重程度和先前创伤事件对酒精使用的间接影响,潜在的调节因素是照顾者的支持。
PTSD 症状中介了先前创伤对 binge drinking 的影响,但不是灾难严重程度的影响。具体来说,那些有更多先前创伤的人报告了更多的 PTSD 症状,这反过来又增加了 binge drinking 的风险。照顾者的支持调节了灾难严重程度对 PTSD 症状的影响,但不是先前创伤的影响。具体来说,对于照顾者支持处于平均或以下水平的青少年来说,灾难严重程度对 PTSD 症状的影响是显著的。
研究结果表明,PTSD 症状是先前创伤对暴露于自然灾害后的青少年 binge drinking 产生影响的一种机制。照顾者的支持可以作为减轻与自然灾害严重程度相关的 PTSD 症状的缓冲,从而降低青少年 binge drinking 的可能性。