McClendon Juliette, Kressin Nancy, Perkins Daniel, Copeland Laurel A, Finley Erin P, Vogt Dawne
National Center for PTSD (116B-3), Women's Health Sciences Division, VA Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
J Trauma Dissociation. 2021 Mar-Apr;22(2):170-187. doi: 10.1080/15299732.2020.1869079. Epub 2021 Jan 18.
Given the diversity of military veterans and growing evidence of ethnoracial disparities in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) within this population, elucidating the role of discrimination-related stress in contributing to these disparities is crucial. We examined the relative impact of discriminatory stress (i.e., due to race/ethnicity, religion, nationality, gender, sexual orientation, or physical appearance) on 6-month changes in PTSD symptom severity among trauma-exposed White (74%), Black (11%) and Hispanic/Latino/a/x (15%) veterans (17% female). PTSD symptoms were measured with the 8-item PTSD Checklist for DSM-5. A measure of the extent to which discrimination has caused stress for the respondent assessed discriminatory stress. Hierarchical regression analyses examined interactions among race/ethnicity, gender and discriminatory stress in predicting six-month changes in PTSD severity. Black and Hispanic/Latino/a/x veterans reported higher baseline PTSD severity and discriminatory stress than White veterans, with some variation by gender. Three-way interactions of race/ethnicity by discriminatory stress by gender were significant, controlling for income, education and age. The relationship between discriminatory stress and increases in PTSD severity was significantly stronger for Black women compared with Black men and did not differ between White men and women. There was also a stronger relationship between discriminatory stress and increases in PTSD severity for Hispanic/Latino/x men as compared to Black men. These findings suggest that discriminatory stress impacts PTSD severity differentially for various ethnoracial/gender groups and highlight the value of applying an intersectional framework that accounts for the synergistic connections among multiple identities to future screening, intervention, and research efforts.
鉴于退伍军人的多样性,以及该群体中创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)存在种族差异的证据不断增加,阐明与歧视相关的压力在导致这些差异方面所起的作用至关重要。我们研究了歧视性压力(即由于种族/民族、宗教、国籍、性别、性取向或外貌)对遭受创伤的白人(74%)、黑人(11%)和西班牙裔/拉丁裔(15%)退伍军人(17%为女性)PTSD症状严重程度6个月变化的相对影响。使用针对《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第5版的8项PTSD检查表来测量PTSD症状。一项评估歧视给受访者造成压力程度的指标用于评估歧视性压力。分层回归分析检验了种族/民族、性别和歧视性压力之间的相互作用,以预测PTSD严重程度的6个月变化。黑人和西班牙裔/拉丁裔退伍军人报告的PTSD基线严重程度和歧视性压力高于白人退伍军人,且存在一些性别差异。在控制收入、教育程度和年龄后,种族/民族、歧视性压力和性别的三向交互作用显著。与黑人男性相比,歧视性压力与PTSD严重程度增加之间的关系在黑人女性中显著更强,而在白人男性和女性之间没有差异。与黑人男性相比,西班牙裔/拉丁裔男性的歧视性压力与PTSD严重程度增加之间也存在更强的关系。这些发现表明,歧视性压力对不同种族/性别人群的PTSD严重程度影响不同,并强调了应用一个交叉性框架的价值,该框架考虑了多种身份之间的协同联系,以用于未来的筛查、干预和研究工作。