Department of Psychiatry, Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University.
Department of Nursing, College of Nursing, Medical University of South Carolina.
Psychol Trauma. 2024 Mar;16(3):504-512. doi: 10.1037/tra0001509. Epub 2023 May 11.
Violent injuries have become increasingly more common in the United States. Individuals experiencing violent injury are at increased risk for the development of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as compared to those experiencing nonviolent injury. Social support is touted as a protective factor against various psychiatric symptoms (i.e., PTSD), though little is known about the relation between PTSD symptoms and social support in traumatic injury populations. The aims of the present paper were twofold: (1) examine the prevalence of PTSD as a function of injury type (2) explore differences in levels of social support as a function of injury type and (3) explore the association between injury type and later PTSD symptoms as moderated by baseline social support.
Participants were 553 adults from a level-one trauma center in the Southeast United States who experienced a violent injury or nonviolent injury and completed measures of social support at baseline as well as PTSD symptoms at the 30-day follow-up timepoint. The study utilized data from both the baseline timepoint (i.e., upon admission to the trauma surgery unit), as well as a 30-day follow-up timepoint.
Results demonstrated that those endorsing nonviolent injury reported lower levels of social support and PTSD symptoms. Social support predicted later PTSD symptoms until injury type was included as a covariate in the model. Social support did not moderate the relationship between injury type and later PTSD symptoms.
Findings highlight the interrelatedness of key risk variables (i.e., injury type) with protective factors in influencing the trajectory of psychopathology postinjury. Violence intervention and interruption programs may have the capacity to fill patient needs when social support networks are insufficient. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).
在美国,暴力伤害变得越来越普遍。与非暴力伤害相比,经历暴力伤害的个体患创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险增加。社会支持被吹捧为预防各种精神症状(即 PTSD)的保护因素,但关于创伤性损伤人群中 PTSD 症状与社会支持之间的关系知之甚少。本研究的目的有两个:(1)检查创伤类型与 PTSD 患病率之间的关系;(2)探讨社会支持水平因创伤类型而产生的差异;(3)探讨创伤类型与随后 PTSD 症状之间的关联,以及基线社会支持对该关联的调节作用。
参与者为来自美国东南部一家一级创伤中心的 553 名成年人,他们经历了暴力伤害或非暴力伤害,并在基线时完成了社会支持和 PTSD 症状的测量,以及在 30 天的随访时间点。该研究利用了基线时间点(即进入创伤外科病房时)和 30 天随访时间点的数据。
结果表明,那些报告非暴力伤害的人报告的社会支持和 PTSD 症状较低。社会支持预测了随后的 PTSD 症状,直到将创伤类型作为协变量纳入模型。社会支持并没有调节创伤类型和随后 PTSD 症状之间的关系。
研究结果强调了关键风险变量(即创伤类型)与保护因素在影响受伤后精神病理学轨迹方面的相互关系。当社会支持网络不足时,暴力干预和中断计划可能有能力满足患者的需求。(PsycInfo 数据库记录(c)2024 APA,保留所有权利)。