Rumination,Resilience, and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Symptom Severity Among Veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan |
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Authors: | Laura Blackburn |
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Affiliation: | Central Alabama Veterans Health Care System, Montgomery, Alabama, USA |
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Abstract: | This study investigated the relationships among combat exposure, intrusive, and deliberate rumination, resilience, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) among service members who deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan (N = 191). Participants completed an online survey and hierarchical linear regression results indicated that enlisted rank, higher combat exposure, lower resilience, and higher intrusive rumination predicted higher levels of PTSD symptom severity. Resilience moderated the relationship between combat exposure and PTSD symptom severity, such that participants who had higher levels of resilience had lower levels of PTSD symptom severity at all levels of combat exposure. These findings suggest the importance of increasing resilience in combat veterans, specifically those of enlisted rank and veterans exposed to higher levels of combat. Findings also suggest that teaching veterans how to control or minimize intrusive rumination might help lower PTSD severity. |
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Keywords: | Deliberate rumination intrusive rumination military veterans posttraumatic stress disorder resilience |
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