The Roles of Combat Exposure, Personal Vulnerability, and Involvement in Harm to Civilians or Prisoners in War-Related Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

B. Dohrenwend, T. Yager, M. Wall, Ben G. Adams
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Abstract

This chapter examines the central assumption in the DSM-III, DSM-III-R, and DSM-IV that potentially traumatic stressors are more important than personal vulnerability in causing PTSD. This chapter tests this assumption with data from a rigorously diagnosed male subsample (n = 260) from the NVVRS. It concludes that, of the three risk factors, only combat exposure proved necessary for disorder onset. Although none of the three risk factors proved sufficient, estimated onset reached 97% for veterans high on all three, with harm to civilians or prisoners showing the largest independent contribution. Severity of combat exposure proved more important than pre-war vulnerability in onset; pre-war vulnerability was as least as important in long-term persistence. Implications for the primacy of the stressor assumption are discussed.
与战争有关的创伤后应激障碍中战斗暴露、个人脆弱性和参与对平民或囚犯的伤害的作用
本章探讨了DSM-III、DSM-III- r和DSM-IV中的中心假设,即潜在的创伤性压力源在导致PTSD方面比个人脆弱性更重要。本章用来自NVVRS的严格诊断的男性子样本(n = 260)的数据验证了这一假设。它的结论是,在三个风险因素中,只有战斗暴露被证明是疾病发作的必要因素。虽然这三个风险因素都不充分,但退伍军人的估计发病率达到97%,这三个因素都很高,对平民或囚犯的伤害显示出最大的独立贡献。事实证明,战斗暴露的严重程度比战前发病时的脆弱性更重要;战前的脆弱性在长期的持久性中至少同样重要。讨论了压力源假设首要性的含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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