Volunteerism and Well-Being in the Context of the World Trade Center Terrorist Attacks.

Richard E Adams, Joseph A Boscarino
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

Using a community sample of New York City residents (N=1681) interviewed 1 and 2 years after the World Trade Center Disaster (WTCD), we estimated several logistic regression equations to assess predictors of volunteerism and the relationship between volunteerism and later well-being. Multivariate results show that those with more education, higher exposure to WTCD events, many life-time traumatic events, and pre-WTCD mental health problems were more likely to report volunteerism post-WTCD. African Americans and Latinos were less likely to volunteer, compared to Whites. Respondents scoring high on the Srole Anomie scale and reporting physical disabilities were also less likely to report volunteering in the aftermath of the WTCD. Multivariate results with volunteerism as an independent variable suggest that people who engaged in this activity were less likely to have poor well-being as measured by the SF-12 physical and mental health scales. We discuss these results as they relate to identity theory, the stress process model, and resilience and how community disaster researchers need to pay closer attention to how people interpret and give meaning to traumatic events.

世贸中心恐怖袭击背景下的志愿服务与福祉。
在世贸中心灾难(WTCD)发生1年和2年后,我们对纽约市居民的社区样本(N=1681)进行了访谈,我们估计了几个逻辑回归方程,以评估志愿服务的预测因素以及志愿服务与后来幸福感之间的关系。多变量结果显示,受教育程度较高、经历过创伤性事件较多、创伤性事件较多、创伤性事件前有心理健康问题的人在创伤性事件后更有可能报告志愿服务。与白人相比,非裔美国人和拉丁裔美国人更不愿意做志愿者。在Srole失范量表和报告身体残疾上得分较高的受访者也不太可能在WTCD之后报告志愿服务。以志愿服务为自变量的多变量结果表明,通过SF-12身心健康量表测量,从事这项活动的人不太可能有不良的幸福感。我们将讨论这些结果,因为它们与身份理论、压力过程模型和复原力有关,以及社区灾难研究人员需要更加关注人们如何解释和赋予创伤事件意义。
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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