Durham VA Health Care System, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
VA Mid-Atlantic Mental Illness Research, Education and Clinical Center, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
J Dual Diagn. 2021 Apr-Jun;17(2):101-112. doi: 10.1080/15504263.2021.1891360. Epub 2021 Mar 17.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and hazardous alcohol use are prevalent among trauma survivors. Despite higher rates of both PTSD and hazardous alcohol use among military combat veterans than civilians, scant research has examined whether military combat experience is associated with with PTSD symptoms. This study tested the hypothesis that compared to trauma-exposed men without combat experience, men military combat experience would be more likely to endorse drinking alcohol to cope with their PTSD symptoms. Interview data from = 11,474 men who reported at least one lifetime traumatic experience were drawn from the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions (NESARC), a face-to-face interview study that recruited a nationally representative sample of adults living in the United States between 2004 and 2005. Among men endorsing lifetime trauma exposure, men with military combat experience ( = 1,386) were more likely than men without combat experience ( = 10,088) to report drinking alcohol to cope (7.22 vs. 2.61% in unweighted analyses, 6.46 vs. 2.37% in weighted analyses). Total number of lifetime trauma types, lifetime PTSD severity, and lifetime alcohol abuse/dependence were significantly associated with drinking to cope in bivariate and multivariate analyses. Military combat experience was significantly associated with drinking to cope in multivariate analyses adjusting for lifetime PTSD diagnosis. Military combat experience was not significantly associated with drinking to cope in multivariate analyses adjusting for lifetime PTSD symptom count. Although military combat experience was significantly associated with drinking to cope in bivariate analyses, multivariate analyses yielded mixed findings: combat experience was significantly associated with drinking to cope in models adjusting for PTSD diagnosis, but not in models adjusting for PTSD symptom count. Findings highlight the importance of assessing and targeting PTSD symptom-related alcohol use, even in the absence of alcohol abuse/dependence. Results from this preliminary study could inform future research on drinking to cope with PTSD symptoms among military combat veterans and other trauma survivors.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和危险饮酒在创伤幸存者中很常见。尽管军事战斗退伍军人 PTSD 和危险饮酒的发生率均高于平民,但很少有研究探讨军事战斗经历是否与 PTSD 症状有关。本研究检验了以下假设:与没有战斗经历的创伤后应激障碍男性相比,有战斗经历的男性更有可能通过饮酒来应对 PTSD 症状。这项研究的数据来自于国家酒精和相关条件流行病学调查(NESARC),该调查对 2004 年至 2005 年间生活在美国的成年人进行了面对面的访谈,共招募了 11474 名至少经历过一次终生创伤的男性。在报告有终生创伤暴露的男性中,有战斗经历的男性(n=1386)比没有战斗经历的男性(n=10088)更有可能报告饮酒来应对创伤后应激障碍(未经加权分析,分别为 7.22%和 2.61%;经加权分析,分别为 6.46%和 2.37%)。在单变量和多变量分析中,终生创伤类型总数、终生 PTSD 严重程度和终生酒精滥用/依赖与饮酒应对显著相关。在调整终生 PTSD 诊断的多变量分析中,战斗经历与饮酒应对显著相关。在调整终生 PTSD 症状数的多变量分析中,战斗经历与饮酒应对无显著相关性。虽然战斗经历在单变量分析中与饮酒应对显著相关,但多变量分析的结果喜忧参半:在调整 PTSD 诊断的模型中,战斗经历与饮酒应对显著相关,但在调整 PTSD 症状数的模型中则不相关。这些发现强调了评估和针对 PTSD 症状相关饮酒的重要性,即使在没有酒精滥用/依赖的情况下也是如此。本初步研究的结果可以为未来研究军事战斗退伍军人和其他创伤幸存者的 PTSD 症状饮酒应对提供信息。