美国退伍军人的生活质量与孤独感。

Katherine Musacchio Schafer, Marie Campione, Thomas Joiner
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摘要

生活质量和孤独感与身心健康结果密切相关。与非退伍军人相比,退伍军人的残疾、合并症和慢性疾病发生率更高,因此这种关系对退伍军人尤为重要。在本项目中,我们使用了 "军人健康与幸福项目 "的数据(n = 1469,67.2% 为男性,32.3% 为女性,0.5% 为变性人、非二性人,不愿多说)来调查美国退伍军人生活质量的五个领域(即一般生活质量、身体健康、心理健康、社会关系和环境)与孤独感之间的联系。研究结果表明,生活质量的每个领域都与孤独感呈显著负相关(r's <-0.45,p's <0.001),因此生活质量随着孤独感的增加而降低。通过线性回归,我们进一步发现,高质量的社会关系(β = -0.385,t = -13.23)、心理功能(β = -0.196,t = -5.28)和身体健康(β = -0.133,t = -4.174)与低水平的孤独感有关。综上所述,这些研究结果表明,在这个退伍军人样本中,1)总体生活质量、身体健康、心理健康、社会关系和环境都与孤独感密切相关;2)其中,社会关系、心理健康和身体健康似乎最能保护人们免受孤独感的困扰,并具有较大的稳健效应大小。我们建议干预和政策研究人员继续调查和开发可行的、可接受的和具有成本效益的方法,以促进退伍军人的社会关系、心理健康和身体健康。数据是在 COVID-19 大流行期间收集的,这可能会限制这些发现的推广性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Quality of Life and Loneliness Among American Military Veterans.
Quality of life and loneliness are closely associated with mental and physical health outcomes. This relationship is particularly important in Veterans who experience elevated rates of disabilities, comorbidities, and chronic health conditions as compared with non-Veterans. In the present project, we use data from the Military Health and Well-Being Project (n = 1469, 67.2% men, 32.3% women, 0.5% transgender, nonbinary, prefer not to say) to investigate the link between five domains of quality of life (i.e., general quality of life, physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment) with loneliness in American Military Veterans. Findings indicated that every domain of quality of life was negatively and significantly associated with loneliness (r's < -0.45, p's < 0.001), such that quality of life decreased as loneliness increased. We further found, using linear regression, that quality social relationships (β = -0.385, t = -13.23), psychological functioning (β = -0.196, t = -5.28), and physical health (β = -0.133, t = -4.174) were related to low levels of loneliness. Taken together, these findings indicate that in this sample of Veterans 1) general quality of life, physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment are all strongly connected with loneliness, and 2) of these, social relationships, psychological health, and physical health seem to protect most against loneliness, with large robust effect sizes. We recommend that intervention and policy researchers continue to investigate and develop feasible, acceptable, and cost-effective ways to promote social relationships, psychological health, and physical health among Veterans. Data were collected during the COVID-19 pandemic, which may limit generalizability of these findings.
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