Sarah L Martindale, Anka A Vujanovic, Anna S Ord, Amanda Cary, Jared A Rowland
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Exposure to blasts is common among service members and history of these exposures has been associated with chronic psychiatric and health outcomes. Evidence suggests that distress tolerance (DT) may moderate this relationship and be a valuable treatment target in this population. The purpose of this manuscript was to evaluate DT as a modifying factor in the association between posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), mild traumatic brain injury (TBI), blast exposure, and functional indicators.
Method: Participants were 275 (86.55% male) combat veterans who served in Iraq or Afghanistan after September 11, 2001. Clinical interviews for PTSD diagnosis, TBI history, and blast exposure were administered, and participants completed self-report questionnaires (DT, PTSD symptom severity, depressive symptom severity, neurobehavioral symptom severity, sleep quality, pain interference, and quality of life).
Results: DT was significantly associated with all functional indicators beyond PTSD diagnosis, mild TBI, and blast severity. There were significant interaction effects between DT and PTSD diagnosis for posttraumatic stress symptom severity, sleep quality, and quality of life. Specifically, there were significant differences in these reported functional indicators between individuals with and without a PTSD diagnosis as DT increases, such that reported symptoms were lower (quality of life better) for individuals without PTSD as DT improved.
Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that DT might be a key factor in postdeployment function for military service members. Treatments targeting DT may be particularly effective in individuals who attribute psychiatric symptoms to history of blast exposure. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).
期刊介绍:
Rehabilitation Psychology is a quarterly peer-reviewed journal that publishes articles in furtherance of the mission of Division 22 (Rehabilitation Psychology) of the American Psychological Association and to advance the science and practice of rehabilitation psychology. Rehabilitation psychologists consider the entire network of biological, psychological, social, environmental, and political factors that affect the functioning of persons with disabilities or chronic illness. Given the breadth of rehabilitation psychology, the journal"s scope is broadly defined.