Dreelin Dorothy, Stanley Taylor B, Blaine Sara K, Tharp David F, Robinson Jennifer L
Department of Psychological Sciences, Auburn University, Auburn, AL 36849, United States.
Project Healing Heroes, Waco, TX 76708, United States.
Mil Med. 2025 Jul 30. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usaf361.
Perceived social support serves as a protective factor in the course of chronic pain and substance use disorders in civilian populations, but the role of support from civilians versus other military personnel for combat veterans experiencing chronic pain has not yet been explored. The current study examined differences in the protective properties of perceived social support from (1) military personnel and (2) civilians, regarding substance use and perceived substance abuse for combat veterans experiencing chronic pain. We hypothesized that higher endorsement of both types of perceived social support would be associated with lower odds of self-reported, perceived substance abuse, and support from military personnel would be associated with lower odds of perceived substance abuse after controlling for the role of non-military social support.
The current study evaluated military personnel who were deployed to a combat zone for more than 1 month. Participants completed an online, anonymous survey including questions regarding experiences with chronic pain, cannabis, and illegal substance use, their beliefs regarding alcohol or prescription pill abuse, and their perceived military and non-military social support. We conducted a series of binary logistic regressions to evaluate whether perceived military and non-military social support predicted the odds of endorsing substance use, with several sociodemographic variables and chronic pain entered as covariates for each model. The Auburn University Institutional Review Board approved all study procedures.
Contrary to our hypotheses, participants reporting higher levels of non-military social support were more likely to endorse using cannabis or other illegal substances and report perceived alcohol or prescription medication abuse, even when controlling for sociodemographic and chronic pain covariates. Our hypothesis that greater support from military personnel would predict lower odds of perceived substance abuse after controlling for the role of non-military social support was not supported.
Our results add to the mixed literature regarding the association between substance use with increased social support among combat veterans, while providing more detail on the role of specific social support sources in relation to drug use as well as alcohol use. Our findings may be because of combat veterans engaging in social drinking with members of their support system or utilizing substances for pain management purposes, but more research is needed on this topic. Results suggest researchers and clinicians should be mindful to inquire of one's social support sources, the quality of these relationships, and what adaptive or maladaptive behaviors may occur within the individual's social support network.
在平民群体中,感知到的社会支持是慢性疼痛和物质使用障碍过程中的一个保护因素,但对于经历慢性疼痛的退伍军人而言,来自平民与其他军事人员的支持所起的作用尚未得到探讨。本研究考察了(1)军事人员和(2)平民给予的感知社会支持在物质使用及对物质滥用的认知方面,对经历慢性疼痛的退伍军人的保护特性差异。我们假设,在控制非军事社会支持的作用后,对这两种类型的感知社会支持的更高认可度将与自我报告的、感知到的物质滥用的较低几率相关,并且来自军事人员的支持将与较低的感知物质滥用几率相关。
本研究评估了被部署到作战区域超过1个月的军事人员。参与者完成了一项在线匿名调查,包括有关慢性疼痛、大麻和非法物质使用经历的问题,他们对酒精或处方药滥用的看法,以及他们感知到的军事和非军事社会支持。我们进行了一系列二元逻辑回归分析,以评估感知到的军事和非军事社会支持是否能预测认可物质使用的几率,每个模型将几个社会人口统计学变量和慢性疼痛作为协变量纳入。奥本大学机构审查委员会批准了所有研究程序。
与我们的假设相反,即使在控制了社会人口统计学和慢性疼痛协变量后,报告非军事社会支持水平较高的参与者更有可能认可使用大麻或其他非法物质,并报告感知到的酒精或处方药滥用。我们关于在控制非军事社会支持的作用后,来自军事人员的更多支持将预测较低的感知物质滥用几率的假设未得到支持。
我们的结果为关于退伍军人物质使用与社会支持增加之间关联的混杂文献增添了内容,同时提供了关于特定社会支持来源在药物使用以及酒精使用方面作用的更多细节。我们的发现可能是因为退伍军人与他们的支持系统成员进行社交饮酒或为了疼痛管理目的使用物质,但关于这个主题还需要更多研究。结果表明,研究人员和临床医生应注意询问一个人的社会支持来源、这些关系的质量,以及在个人社会支持网络中可能出现的适应性或适应不良行为。